Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/1999-12-01-Speech-3-127"

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"en.19991201.10.3-127"2
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"Mr President, I have spoken out several times in favour of Mr Öçalan, but I have to say that the debate on Turkey must not focus solely on the case of President Öçalan’s death sentence, because Turkey as a whole is undemocratic; in Turkey, human rights are not respected. I visited Turkey as a member of the Committee on Human Rights of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, and I therefore think I am speaking after due consideration. It is not only the Öçalan case which leads me say that Turkey is not yet ready to apply: Mr Öçalan, among other things, was practically handed over by the D’Alema Government – a black mark against Italy’s name – but on the other hand, it was precisely from the Italian Penal Code that Turkey borrowed article 155 of its own Penal Code, which permitted Mr Öçalan to be condemned – article 155 of the Turkish Penal Code was copied from article 241 of the Italian Penal Code – and therefore I was not in the least surprised by the position of the Italian Government on this case either. Be that as it may, Turkey still has the death penalty: well, while it is hard to change the mentality of the police and change the situation in the prisons, a law is, nevertheless, sufficient and a parliamentary vote is sufficient to abolish the death penalty, which is what many countries in the European Union have done. How one can have capital punishment and at the same time ask to join the European Union is something that still astounds me, but I am even more astonished that there is talk of granting candidate status to a country that has not yet abolished capital punishment. For this reason too, therefore, I am in favour of postponing the vote."@en1

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