Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

EU ministers clash on 'second-class Turkey' fears

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • EU ministers clash on 'second-class Turkey' fears

    EU ministers clash on 'second-class Turkey' fears
    By Daniel Dombey in Brussels


    FT
    December 13 2004

    European Union foreign ministers clashed over Turkey on Monday, with a
    number of countries mounting a rearguard action against proposals they
    fear could relegate Turkey to second-class status within the EU.

    The meeting was to prepare for an EU summit on Thursday and Friday,
    which is expected to take the decision to begin membership talks with
    Ankara. The negotiations could last a decade.

    But the UK, Italy and Belgium are worried about draft summit proposals
    that suggest the EU consider preventing normal rules from coming into
    force for any new member.

    The proposals are part of the draft conclusions for the summit, which
    say "long transition periods, derogations, specific arrangements or
    permanent safeguard clauses may be considered" in such instances.

    A senior European Commission official warned: "If the word
    'derogation' appears, that really opens the door to a privileged
    partnership rather thanfull membership."

    At Monday's meeting, José Manuel Barroso, Commission president,
    complained that the draft went much further than the Commission's
    official recommendation on Turkey, which suggested the EU could
    consider safeguards on the movementof labour, to be implemented in
    cases of economic instability.

    Ankara, which has tried to deepen ties with the EU for four decades,
    is hostile to any suggestion that negotiations could end with an
    agreement short of full membership. But France, Austria and Denmark,
    which support the proposals on safeguards, believe the EU has to leave
    open the possibility of a fall-back agreement should the negotiations
    stall.

    Michel Barnier, French foreign minister, said the EU had to give
    reassurances that Turkey's membership was not preordained - though it
    should begin negotiations with the aim of membership.

    Mr Barnier also said France would seek Turkish recognition of killings
    of Armenians between 1915 and 1923 as genocide, once accession talks
    begin.

    Although he made clear that such recognition was not a condition for
    the start of talks, his remark drew an angry response from Turkish
    officials, who have always denied genocide.

    Croatia accession

    Croatia could start talks to join the EU in the spring of 2005
    provided it co-operates fully with war crimes investigators, EU
    foreign ministers agreed on Monday, George Parker reports from
    Brussels. The date for the start of talks will be finalised by EU
    leaders at this week's summit, but European diplomats said they could
    begin as early as March.

    Britain and some Nordic countries are reluctant to give Croatia a date
    to start talks because they believe Zagreb has failed to honour
    commitments tohand over all suspected war criminals.

    Meanwhile Austria and Germany, historically close to Croatia, want the
    Balkan state to join the union at the earliest opportunity.

    Assuming Croatia proves it is working with the international war
    crimes tribunal in The Hague, it could join the EU in either 2008 or
    2009.

    European leaders will have to agree on the question of who decides
    whether Croatia is co-operating fully with the tribunal: the EU
    itself, or the authorities in The Hague.

    Ivo Sanader, Croatia's prime minister, wrote to the EU's 25 leaders
    earlier this month urging them to give his country the green light to
    start talks.

    Responding to criticisms from chief war crimes prosecutor Carla del
    Ponte, he said Croatia would co-operate with the tribunal "without
    reserve, withholding or duplicity".
Working...
X