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KurdistanObserver.com
EU Conference Highlights Continued
Repression Of Kurds
Sep 21, 2005
A two-day conference (19-20
September) entitled “The EU, Turkey, and Kurds” is under way in Brussels. A
high-level panel opening the European Parliament-sponsored event yesterday was
in general agreement that Turkey’s treatment of its Kurds and other minorities
is the main yardstick for measuring the country’s progress toward EU accession
criteria. The panelists agreed that the implementation of recent democratic
constitutional reforms adopted in Turkey leaves a lot to be desired. The
conference comes as EU ministers are expected to approve today a declaration on
another troubling issue -- Turkey's refusal to recognize EU-member Cyprus. The
declaration is said to clear the way for membership talks between the EU and
Turkey to begin on schedule.
Brussels, 20 September 2005 (RFE/RL) - The Brussels conference comes at a
crucial time for Turkey, with the scheduled start of accession talks with the EU
on 3 October just two weeks away.
The apparent decision on Cyprus removes one obstacle. EU ministers are close to
finalizing an agreement that Ankara must recognize the island's Greek south
before Turkey can officially become a member -- a step that may be 10 or more
years away.
But despite such resolutions, there remains a general sense of unease about
Turkey's claim to a place in Europe. This feeling was evident yesterday. At the
very beginning of the event, conference Chairwoman Karianne Westrheim was forced
to observe that not all participants had been able to come.
“Some of our speakers cannot be here today, including Tuncer Bakirhan, the
president of [the Kurdish political party] Dehap. Because of his statement
related to the Kurdish question in Turkey, his freedom of movement has been
limited, and he is banned [from traveling] abroad," Westrheim said. "We hope
that the government of Turkey will understand that this attitude is unacceptable
within the European Union.”
Other notable absentees included European Parliament President Josep Borrell and
EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn. Both had initially agreed to address the
conference, but stayed away in the end, citing pressing engagements elsewhere.
Standing in for Borrell was one of the vice presidents of the European
Parliament, Edward McMillan Scott. McMillan Scott is a leading British
conservative member of the European Parliament (MEP), as well as a parliamentary
rapporteur on Turkey. He set the tone for the conference by endorsing Turkey's
EU ambitions -- but with caution.
“My simple message today is that the process of change which has begun in
Turkey, which has led to a positive vote in the European Parliament on the
report by Camiel Eurlings earlier this year [actually December 2004], will be
followed by much vigilance from all the political groups in the European
Parliament into a whole range of issues that affect EU-Turkey relations, but
based, as Madam chairman has already remarked, on the core principles for
enlargement -- the Copenhagen criteria of 1993,” McMillan Scott said.
The three panelists that followed all used the experience of Turkey’s Kurdish
community to highlight serious and persistent shortcomings in the country’s
recently revived record of political and constitutional reforms.
The only Kurdish representative on the panel, Hatap Dicle, a former member of
the Turkish parliament, was clearest in his support for Turkey’s EU membership.
In 1994, Dicle -- together with three other Kurdish members of Turkey's
parliament -- was sentenced to 15 years in prison. Amnesty International
described them as prisoners of conscience jailed for nonviolent promotion of a
Kurdish political identity.
Now, Dicle told the Brussels conference, Turkey’s EU membership is seen as a
“source of great hope” among the country’s Kurdish community. However, he
indicated, Turkey's road to European rights standards will be a long one. He
said the Turkish Army, with the connivance of the government, has since early
2004 conducted a renewed campaign of violence and murder in Kurdish areas. Dicle
called on the Turkish government to recognize a Kurdish political and cultural
identity that he said would not seek to undermine the integrity of the country.
Vittorio Agnoletto, an Italian MEP who is the coordinator of the Kurdish support
group in the European Parliament, noted that Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayiip
Erdogan recently hinted at possible talks with the Kurdish community. But,
Agnoletto added, this has not happened.
Luc van den Brande, a rapporteur for Turkey on the Council of Europe’s
Parliamentary Assembly Monitoring Committee, said Turkey must ratify the
European convention on the rights of ethnic minorities. He noted that Turkey has
begun reforms in theory, but has problems implementing even those dealing with
“basic human rights.”
European Parliament Vice President McMillan Scott spoke for a growing number of
European politicians when he wrapped up his speech. After officially encouraging
Turkey's European ambitions, he offered a more somber personal view.
“I was one of those who voted for Turkish negotiations to begin. But, speaking
personally now, I remain to be convinced that Turkish membership [in the EU] in
the present circumstances would be benefit either to the people of Turkey --
including the Kurdish people -- of to the people of the European Union,"
McMillan Scott said. "We are at a sensitive moment in the evolution of the
history of the European Union and I don’t think I’m misleading you in telling
you that there are very, very divided opinions in the European Parliament on
that question.”
McMillan Scott's words left few with the feeling that Turkey will have to work
hard to overcome what is widely seen as its chronic lack of progress in order to
hold on to its EU ambitions. |
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