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NEWS: EU to give Turkey 2 years to eradicate torture Print E-mail
Written by Henry Adams   
Tuesday, 01 November 2005

London's Financial Times reported Monday that it had seen a draft of a document to be presented to Ankara as part of EU membership talks.  --  A two-year deadline to Turkey will be given "to eradicate torture, establish freedom of religion, and assert civilian control over the military if it is to succeed at attaining European Union membership in about 10 years," Daniel Dombey and Vincent Boland reported.  --  Recently Philip Stevens of the Financial Times framed the magnitude of the issue of Turkish membership in the EU in these terms:  "Chris Patten puts the case succinctly in an excellent new book (Not Quite the Diplomat: Home Truths About World Affairs, Allen Lane, 2005):  'The reconciliation of France and Germany was the necessary and admirable European accomplishment of the 20th century,' he says. 'Reconciling the West and the Islamic world, with Europe acting as the hinge between the two, is a big task for the 21st.'"  --  This statement may be true, but the more one reflects on the history of 20th-century Franco-German relations, the more startling, and even appalling, it seems....

World

Europe

BRUSSELS TO GIVE TURKEY TORTURE DEADLINE
By Daniel Dombey (Brussels) and Vincent Boland (Ankara)

Financial Times (UK)
October 31, 2005

http://news.ft.com/cms/s/cf81f8a6-4a3e-11da-b8b1-0000779e2340.html

The European Commission will give Turkey a two-year deadline to eradicate torture, establish freedom of religion, and assert civilian control over the military if it is to succeed at attaining European Union membership in about 10 years.

In a sign of how much Turkey will have to change if it is to join the EU, the Commission this month will set Ankara a daunting checklist of almost 150 short-term tasks.

The document, a draft of which has been seen by the Financial Times, indicates membership talks are likely to be tougher than expected over the next two years, but is meant to ensure that Turkish reform eases EU voters' concerns over its potential membership.

Turkish membership is unpopular among many European electorates. Polls this year found that 80 per cent of Austrians opposed Turkey's entry, while only 11 per cent of French voters supported it.

Among short-term priorities, "expected to be accomplished within one to two years," the draft document calls for Turkey to "ensure implementation . . . of the 'zero tolerance' policy against torture" and to "adopt a law comprehensively addressing all the difficulties faced by non- Muslim religious minorities and communities."

It adds that in the same time-span the country must "establish full parliamentary oversight of military and defense policy," "abolish any remaining competence of military courts to try civilians," and "ensure the independence of the judiciary."

The proposal, on the "principles, priorities, and conditions" of integrating Turkey with the EU, fills in the gaps left by last month's decision to begin membership talks with Ankara.

The negotiations themselves are not likely to begin until next year and the Commission's proposals emphasize the need for Turkey to focus on implementation after a series of legislative changes in 2003 to 2004.

Officials in Ankara say they are aware of the scale of the task ahead but there is little sign the government is ready to launch a new set of radical reforms to match those it has already introduced. Implementation of recent reforms also is likely to cause friction with the entrenched bureaucracy and within the criminal justice system.

Olli Rehn, the EU's enlargement commissioner, is also anxiously awaiting the trial in December of Orhan Pamuk, the Turkish author charged with "denigrating the state" for comments about the deaths of Kurds and Armenians.

If Mr. Pamuk is convicted, many officials fear the biggest crisis yet in Turkey's membership bid.

In a nod towards the other looming problem in the talks, the Commission paper calls for Turkey to move towards "normalization of bilateral relations" with Cyprus in the short term.

While Cyprus can block the membership negotiations at almost any time, at present Turkey neither recognizes the country's government nor allows Cypriot ships to dock at its ports -- chiefly because Ankara wants to press Cyprus to agree to a settlement for the divided island.


Last Updated ( Tuesday, 01 November 2005 )
 
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