Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: EP Urges Top Court To Respect Rule Of Law

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: EP Urges Top Court To Respect Rule Of Law

    EP URGES TOP COURT TO RESPECT RULE OF LAW

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    April 23 2008

    The European Parliament has voiced concern over implications of
    an ongoing closure case against Turkey's ruling party while urging
    respect for the rule of law and European standards.

    Last month Turkey's Constitutional Court decided unanimously to hear
    an appeal from a top prosecutor to close Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan's Justice and Development Party (AK Party) on charges that
    it had become a "focal point for anti-secular activities."

    The prosecutor has also sought a five-year ban from party politics
    for 71 politicians, including Erdogan and former AK Party member
    President Abdullah Gul. The EU, which Turkey aspires to join, has
    harshly criticized the case and even warned accession talks with
    Turkey could come to a halt if the AK Party is closed down in the end.

    The committee is "concerned about the implications of the AK Party
    closure case," a non-binding resolution approved late on Monday
    almost unanimously by the Foreign Affairs Committee of the European
    Parliament in Strasbourg said.

    The resolution followed on from a progress report on Turkey's EU
    accession bid last year by the executive European Commission. The
    committee "expects the Turkish Constitutional Court to respect
    principles of the rule of law, European standards and the Venice
    Commission guidelines on the prohibition of political parties,"
    the resolution also said.

    "Turkey should show that it wants to continue its full membership
    negotiations with the EU by making reforms," the report's author
    and negotiator, Dutch MEP Ria Oomen Ruijten, was quoted as saying
    yesterday at a press conference by the Anatolia news agency. Not only
    the government, but all political parties represented in Parliament
    are responsible for working for more reforms, Oomen Ruijten added.

    The report urged Turkey's Parliament to reform "without delay" penal
    code Article 301, which prohibits "insulting Turkishness" and which
    has been used against hundreds of intellectuals and journalists,
    including slain Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink and Nobel
    literature laureate Orhan Pamuk.

    It said that an amendment to 301 that would replace "insulting
    Turkishness" by "insulting the Turkish nation" was "merely a first
    step toward a fundamental reform of this article."

    It deplored that Turkish prosecution of people who expressed
    non-violent opinions increased in 2007. Turkey started EU accession
    talks in 2005, but talks have been held back by slow progress in
    EU-linked reforms, the impact of the unresolved Cyprus dispute and
    the reluctance of some EU members, such as France and Austria, to
    see Turkey join.

    The European Parliament resolution was passed by 53 votes to two,
    with four abstentions, an official of the parliament said. It is to be
    debated in a full session in May. Parliament can make recommendations
    on foreign policy, although these are not binding on the 27 EU
    member states.

    "It is a message to Turkey: they have to deliver now," Oomen Ruijten
    told Reuters earlier. "They promised 2008 would be the year of the
    reforms, so I will keep them to their promise."

    Erdogan vowed last Tuesday to speed up political reforms after
    stalling for more than a year amid opposition from nationalist
    parties. European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso visited
    Turkey last week and urged it to speed up reforms and show more
    interest in EU membership. He stressed EU concerns over the move
    against the AK Party, which the commission has said could jeopardize
    Turkey's EU entry talks.
Working...
X