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EU digests Turkey in pre-summit talks

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  • EU digests Turkey in pre-summit talks

    Agence France Presse -- English
    December 13, 2004 Monday 4:59 PM GMT

    EU digests Turkey in pre-summit talks

    BRUSSELS


    The European Union Monday launched a week of furious haggling on
    Turkey with the bloc's Dutch presidency upbeat on its EU prospects
    but critics raising the stakes against the Muslim-majority country.

    With EU leaders set this week to decide whether to launch
    long-delayed accession talks with Ankara, Turkey's Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan said its EU bid was nothing less than the
    "project of the century".

    The Netherlands, Britain and Germany all reaffirmed their backing for
    Turkey's EU bid. But discord in the 25-nation bloc simmered as EU
    foreign ministers held talks to set the stage for the summit Thursday
    and Friday.

    The heads of government are expected to give a green light for Turkey
    to open accession negotiations fully five years after it was formally
    endorsed as an EU candidate.

    But their approval will be hedged with a raft of conditions and
    accompanied by warnings that the talks could be suspended if Turkey
    flagrantly violates EU principles, and that there is no guarantee of
    membership at the end of the day.

    According to diplomats, the foreign ministers failed to make any
    headway on the most pressing question -- when should the talks start?

    Turkey wants the EU to abide by a promise to launch the negotiations
    "without delay".

    But the latest draft summit conclusions left the date open, with
    France for one pushing for it to be held back until the second half
    of 2005 to avoid the Turkey question clouding a French referendum on
    the EU's constitution.

    French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier upped the ante by calling on
    Turkey to admit to the World War I massacre of Armenians by their
    Ottoman rulers during its EU negotiations.

    And while Austria renewed its demand for Turkey to be offered a
    "privileged partnership" rather than full EU membership, Cyprus
    demanded Turkey move by next March on normalising its ties with the
    divided Mediterranean island.

    But meeting in Berlin, Dutch Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende and
    German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder said the EU would offer Turkey
    nothing short of membership negotiations at this week's summit.

    "We agree on several points: first, the aim is membership and the aim
    will not be watered down," Schroeder told reporters after talks with
    Balkenende, whose country currently holds the EU presidency.

    "Secondly, there will be a date (for the start of membership
    negotiations) and thirdly, as the commission already stated, the
    negotiation process will take a long time. We expect 10-15 years with
    an open outcome to the talks."

    "I have the feeling that we will reach consensus at the end of the
    week," Dutch Foreign Minister Ben Bot said here, while rebuffing talk
    of a privileged partnership.

    "Turkey is a candidate (for EU membership). Turkey is also aiming for
    membership and that will be, let's say, the objective of
    negotiations," he told reporters.

    Cypriot Foreign Minister George Iacovou had earlier evoked the threat
    of Nicosia vetoing Turkey's EU bid unless it recognises his
    internationally backed government, rather than the breakaway
    Turkish-Cypriot republic.

    But he later told reporters at the EU talks here: "We have not asked
    for legally defined recognition but normalisation of relations in
    general and in particular, in the bilateral field."

    Austrian Chancellor Wolfgang Schuessel meanwhile reiterated his
    opposition to full Turkish membership of the EU, pointing to adhesion
    costs estimated at between 25 billion and 30 billion euros a year.

    "Who should pay that?" he asked the economic magazine Trend in an
    interview to appear Tuesday.

    Ankara, however, believes that it has earned the right to a date to
    open EU accession talks by ramming through a raft of tough reforms to
    its political system, judiciary, military and economy.

    "Turkey has kept to its side of the bargain," British Foreign
    Secretary Jack Straw said here, rejecting the imposition of new
    conditions on Erdogan's government.

    As for Erdogan, nothing less than harmony between the West and Islam
    is at stake.

    "To have a country like Turkey, where the cultures of Islam and
    democracy have merged together, taking part in such an institution as
    the EU will bring harmony of civilisations," he told Britain's daily
    The Independent.
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