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EU warns Ankara over ruling on Armenian journalist

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  • EU warns Ankara over ruling on Armenian journalist

    EU warns Ankara over ruling on Armenian journalist

    Agence France Presse -- English
    July 12, 2006 Wednesday 10:59 AM GMT

    BRUSSELS, July 12 2006 -- The European Commission lamented Wednesday
    a Turkish court ruling against an ethnic Armenian journalist for
    "denigrating the Turkish national identity," warning the case could
    cloud Ankara's EU hopes.

    Commenting on an appeal court ruling on Hrant Dink, editor of the
    bilingual Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos, EU Enlargement Commissioner
    Olli Rehn called on the Turkish government to bolster freedom of
    speech in the country.

    "I am disappointed by this judgement which limits the exercise of
    freedom of expression in Turkey," he said, following Tuesday's court
    ruling, the first such judgment based on article 301 of Turkey's new
    Penal Code.

    He noted that ruling "will set the trend for lower jurisdiction to
    follow when applying article 301 in the future," adding: "This is
    all the more serious since there are still a number of similar court
    cases pending."

    "I would therefore urge the Turkish authorities to amend article 301
    and other vaguely formulated articles in order to guarantee freedom
    of expression in Turkey," he said.

    He underlined that freedom of expression is a key principle of the
    EU's so-called Copenhagen political criteria, which Ankara must adhere
    to if it one day wants to join the currently 25-nation bloc.

    "In any case, the Commission will review the situation in light of
    the Copenhagen political criteria in its upcoming Progress Report,"
    Rehn said, referring to an annual report on Ankara's EU preparations
    due in October.

    Turkey began EU entry talks last October, but the negotiations are
    likely to take at least a decade and Ankara has been warned there is
    no guarantee of eventual membership.

    Dink was convicted in October for an article about the collective
    memory of the mass killings of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire,
    which many countries recognize as genocide.

    He now faces the risk of going to prison if he commits a similar
    offense over the next five years.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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