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Turkey May Relax Free Speech Limits

TURKEY MAY RELAX FREE SPEECH LIMITS
By Dan Bilefsky

New York Times
International Herald Tribune
Nov 7 2006

ISTANBUL Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has signaled that he is
prepared to amend a law limiting free speech, in an apparent 11th-hour
attempt to prevent a crisis with the European Union.

The surprise move Sunday by Erdogan came just three days before
the European Commission is expected to publish a report criticizing
Turkey for sluggishness on reforms necessary if it wants to join the
25-member bloc.

"The move looks desperate," said Ilker Domac, a Turkish economist.

"It shows how badly things are going with Turkey’s EU membership
prospects."

Talks with the EU have reached an impasse that could result in the
suspension of the country’s EU membership talks, some Turks fear.

Such a move would hobble a key European and American ally in an
unstable region and would risk slowing the pace of its political and
economic reforms.

The commission, the EU executive branch, has been particularly
concerned by Article 301 of the Turkish penal code, which makes
insulting Turkishness a crime. The law attracted global criticism
earlier this year when the Turkish writer Orhan Pamuk, who was awarded
the 2006 Nobel Prize in Literature, was put on trial for telling a
Swiss newspaper that more than a million Armenians were massacred by
Ottoman Turks during World War I. The case was later dismissed.

In an apparent attempt to gain favor with the European Union before
the commission’s report is released Wednesday, Erdogan signaled that
his party, Justice and Development, might be willing to amend the law.

"We are studying several options for how we can handle Article 301 in
harmony with the spirit of the reforms," he said without elaborating.

Turkish analysts said this would likely entail narrowing the legal
definition of what constitutes an insult to Turkishness and amending
the law to make it compatible with the European Court of Human Rights.

Erdogan, who faces strong pressure from nationalists not to change
the law, all but ruled out doing so last week. But Turkish officials
said he had tempered his resistance after furious lobbying by human
rights groups, trade unions and the business community, which fear
that a break in EU membership talks would undermine Turkey’s stability.

EU officials cautiously welcomed the move, but warned that Turkey’s
membership bid still faced enormous obstacles, in particular a
simmering dispute over Cyprus that shows little sign of resolution.

"This is a positive signal, but there are other big hurdles that still
need to be overcome," said Joost Lagendijk, the chairman of the Turkey
delegation in the European Parliament and a member of the Green group.

Turkey has said it will not open its ports to ships from Cyprus,
an EU member, until the European Union lifts trade restrictions
against Turkish Cypriots in northern Cyprus, which is recognized
internationally by Ankara alone. The Cyprus impasse has proved so
intractable that last week Finland, which holds the Union’s rotating
presidency, canceled talks because the parties refused to be in the
same room.

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