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Turkey EU bid threatened by genocide past

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  • Turkey EU bid threatened by genocide past

    ISN, Switzerland
    Dec 14 2004

    Turkey EU bid threatened by genocide past

    European Community ISN SECURITY WATCH (14/12/04) - France has added
    another condition for Turkey's eventual membership in the EU,
    demanding that Ankara recognize the mass killing of Armenians in
    1915. EU ministers gathered yesterday for a foreign ministers meeting
    in Brussels to prepare the next summit of heads of state, where
    members will decide on the club's next wave of enlargement by setting
    dates for membership talks for Turkey and Croatia and confirming
    Bulgaria and Romania's membership by 2007. Speaking after the
    meeting, French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier said his country
    would raise the question of the massacre, when up to 1.5 million
    Armenians were killed by Ottoman Turkish forces. `I think that
    Turkey, as a big country, has a duty to remember. I believe that when
    the time comes, Turkey should come to terms with its past, be
    reconciled with its own history, and recognize this tragedy,' Barnier
    told reporters. He said France's demand was not a condition for
    opening membership negotiations with Turkey, which are expected to
    begin next year, but warned that the issue would be raised once talks
    were officially opened. Armenians say 1.5 million of their people
    died in an Ottoman Empire campaign to force them from eastern Turkey
    between 1915 and 1923. Turkish authorities refuse to recognize the
    1915 massacre as genocide, saying Armenians were killed or displaced
    only as the Ottoman Empire tried to quell civil unrest. Armenia has
    asked Turkey to apologize as a condition for establishing diplomatic
    relations. France officially recognized the Armenian genocide in
    2001, and is now coming under pressure from Armenians living in
    France to raise the issue with Turkey, just ahead of EU membership
    bid talks. Turkey signed the association agreement for EU membership
    in 1963, and it is expected that a two-day EU summit this week will
    finally decide to begin formal membership talks. At the summit, which
    begins on Thursday and Friday, leaders must also decide exactly when
    negotiations will be opened. EU sources told ISN Security Watch today
    that negotiations would most likely begin in the second half of 2005,
    but that the talks would not guarantee EU membership in the end. In
    France, a large section of the population is against Turkish
    membership, and a referendum will be held on whether to accept Turkey
    in the EU. Recent polls show that a majority of citizens in Germany
    and Austria are also against Turkey's EU membership. In other news,
    foreign ministers yesterday said Croatia would be given the green
    light to start entry talks with Brussels, provided the EU decided it
    was satisfied with the country's level of cooperation with the UN war
    crimes tribunal in the Hague. `Negotiations could be opened around
    April 2005, when the Council anticipates that Croatia will fully
    cooperate with the [International Criminal Tribunal for the former
    Yugoslavia] ICTY,' Dutch Foreign Minister Bernard Bot, whose country
    holds the EU presidency, said at a press conference. Retired Croatian
    Army General Ante Gotovina, accused by the ICTY of massacring Serb
    civilians during the 1992-1995 Balkan wars, is the remaining obstacle
    impeding Croatia's EU entry talks. Authorities in Zagreb have
    repeatedly said they were not informed of his whereabouts, while ICTY
    officials have suggested otherwise. Some EU member countries have
    raised doubts about Croatia's claims of ignorance with regard to
    Gotovina's whereabouts, and have been pushing other member states not
    to fix a date for the talks, until Zagreb prove its full cooperation
    with the UN tribunal regarding the fugitive general. (By Ekrem
    Krasniqi in Brussels)
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