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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsTurkish human rights record will keep it out of the European Union
Anyone who reads the international news about such things knows that Turkish President Erdogan's recent big victory at the polls was immediately preceded by a crackdown on (and arrests of) many of his political opponents, especially journalists. While that alone would raise eyebrows in EU human rights circles, the current mass, violent arrests of anti-government demonstrators and the Turkish military occupation of parts of Northwestern Iraq only further diminish Turkey's hopes to soon become a member state of the European Union.
Police use pepper spray against demonstrators during a protest over the arrest of journalists in Ankara, Turkey, November 27, 2015 (Reuters)
'No human rights policy discount for Turkey' declares top German civil liberties official
Turkey must improve its human rights record before it can justify admission to the EU, claims Germanys Human Rights Commissioner Christoph Strässer, adding that under President Recep Tayyip Erdogan the situation in the country has "deteriorated" drastically.
Asked whether the EU will make any concessions for Ankara's membership, Strässer replied: This concern drives me. There can be no human rights policy discount for Turkey. We must not be generous towards Turkey just because presently we cooperate more with it. The EU must stick to its crystal-clear strict rules with respect to human rights and press freedom, he told Germany's N24 news website. Turkey first sought EU membership back in 1987, but its bid has made little progress since then, with key issues like fundamental freedoms and the future of Cyprus proving to be major obstacles.
It seems to me that Turkey is trying to use the situation in Syria and its geopolitical tussle with Russia in order to bring this potential EU membership back on the agenda, journalist Bryan MacDonald noted, sharing his opinion on Turkish membership in the EU with RT. However, I think it is pie in the sky - it is just kind words they are getting from the EU because they are useful to NATO and the EU at the moment. I dont see any possibility that 80 million Turks who are Muslims in a largely Christian EU will ever be allowed to join the organization, he added.
(snip)
Erdogans regime used state security as an excuse to cover up its smuggling of arms into Syria and persecute the journalists who revealed it, the imprisoned editor-in-chief of the Turkish Cumhuriyet newspaper, Can Dundar, wrote in the Guardian on Tuesday. Turkeys regime not only smuggled guns into Syria, it used state security as an excuse to imprison the journalists who reported it, Dundar wrote.
(snip)
Read more at: https://www.rt.com/news/327533-germany-turkey-eu-membership/
LittleBlue
(10,362 posts)They should never be rewarded for this. Their people can't even criticize Ataturk.
It's long past time we cracked down on these states.
another_liberal
(8,821 posts)Germany has admitted its national guilt for the Nazi policies of genocide against Europe's Jews and other minorities. One will get arrested in Turkey for even mentioning their early 20th Century genocide against the Ottoman Armenians. That is the official government policy there.
leveymg
(36,418 posts)But, by that standard, the US, UK and France might also not make it into the EU.
another_liberal
(8,821 posts)Of course in this world, none of the rules apply to the United States, or anyone else to whom we don't want them to apply.
The way in which we employ our fleeting status as the only "Superpower" is fraught with really terrible precedents for other major powers, regarding what obligations (if any) they must have to international law.
eissa
(4,238 posts)Acknowledge historical facts, stop supplying terrorists, and then MAYBE they can be considered.