April 28, 2016 - 16:22 AMT
EU slams Turkey over rights abuses ahead of report on visa waiver

Turkey's crackdown on the media and reported human rights abuses are pushing the country further away from Europe even as it hopes to join the European Union, a senior EU official said Thursday, The Associated Press reports.

European Commission Vice-President Frans Timmermans told EU lawmakers that "the distance between us and Turkey is not decreasing, it is increasing."

"If they want to come closer to Europe — that is what they state — they should improve the situation of the media, of human rights, of civil society," he said.

Timmermans is a key negotiator of the widely criticized EU-Turkey agreement to stem the flow of migrants to Greece.

Human rights and media freedom groups have repeatedly sounded the alarm over the limited tolerance of dissent shown by authorities in Turkey, where nearly 2,000 legal cases have been opened against people accused of insulting President Recep Tayyip Erdogan since he came to office in 2014.

Timmermans, who is Dutch and a former foreign minister, also emphasized that Turkey must fully respect all the conditions necessary to secure a visa-waiver for its citizens wanting to travel to Europe for short-term leisure or business stays.

"The onus is on Turkey. They have to comply with the 72 benchmarks that are in there," he said. "We will not play around with those benchmarks. They are clear, they are legally framed."

The Commission on May 4 will release a report on whether Ankara has fulfilled the requirements. If it has, the EU executive will recommend a visa waiver for Turkey by June 30.