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Turkey's Erdoğan says reform document shows commitment to EU membership process

"With this reform document, even though the promises given to us were not kept, we express our commitment to the full EU membership process. We believe that the completion of the EU negotiation process, which has been ongoing since 2005 despite everything, bears importance for Europe at least as much as it does for us," Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said in his speech during a meeting at Beştepe Congress Center, where he unveiled the country's Judicial Reform Strategy Document.

Anadolu Agency WORLD
Published May 30,2019
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Turkey's new judicial reform package shows the country's commitment to full EU membership despite "unkept promises", President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said on Thursday.

"With this reform document, even though the promises given to us were not kept, we express our commitment to the full EU membership process," Erdoğan told a program at Beştepe Congress Center where he unveiled the country's Judicial Reform Strategy Document.

"We believe that the completion of the EU negotiation process, which has been ongoing since 2005 despite everything, bears importance for Europe at least as much as it does for us," Erdoğan added.

Turkey applied for EU membership in 1987 and accession talks began in 2005.

However, negotiations stalled in 2007 due to objections by the Greek Cypriot administration on the divided island of Cyprus as well as opposition from Germany and France.

Erdoğan said the reforms would allow pregnant women, children, and elderly people charged with petty crimes to serve their sentences at home via electronic tagging.

He noted that this would be socially beneficial and save costs at penal institutions.

Erdoğan also said the reform document would increase citizens' confidence in judiciary and it will provide a foreseeable investment environment.

He also added that the document would strengthen the freedom of speech and improve it further.

Erdoğan noted that under the new measures, lawyers satisfying certain criteria would be issued new passports that would ease their international activities.

He underlined that the reforms were people- and service-focused and would more effectively protect rights and freedoms, improve the independence and impartiality of the judiciary, strengthen legal security and facilitate access to justice for all.

Erdoğan said the full text of the document was available on the Internet and as a hard-cover publication.