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  • EU Executive, Parliament, Support Turkish Entry Talks

    PolitInfo, Germany
    Dec 15 2004

    EU Executive, Parliament, Support Turkish Entry Talks

    Brussels

    The European Parliament has urged European Union leaders to open
    membership talks with Turkey when they meet in Brussels Thursday and
    Friday. The parliament voiced its support for the beginning of talks
    just after the head of the EU's executive body said the moment has
    come for negotiations on Turkey's membership in the 25-nation bloc to
    begin.

    The decision that EU leaders must make at their two-day summit this
    week is whether to start entry talks with Turkey. They will not be
    deciding whether to let Turkey join the Union.

    But even the decision to start talks with a relatively poor,
    populous, overwhelmingly Muslim country sitting on the cusp between
    Europe and the Middle East has sparked a huge debate within the EU.

    Doubts about whether Europe has been able to or ever can absorb its
    growing Muslim population has turned many ordinary Europeans against
    the idea of bringing Turkey into the EU. And many politicians are
    playing to those fears in the run-up to the summit. Opposition to
    Turkish membership is especially strong in Austria, France and
    Germany.

    Richard Howitt, a British member of the European Parliament's
    Socialist bloc, says domestic political considerations could still
    thwart an EU decision to start negotiations with Turkey, despite a
    recommendation by the European Commission -- the EU's executive body
    -- that such talks begin.

    "The assessment was done. It was done by the European Commission. It
    showed that political and human rights and democracy criteria, known
    as the Copenhagen criteria had been met by Turkey. And it is only
    political intervention, perhaps some of the countries playing to
    their own electorates, that could get in the way between now and a
    positive decision," Mr. Howitt said.

    Jose Manuel Durao Barroso, the commission's president, told French
    television Wednesday that EU nations should recognize Turkey's
    efforts and set a date for talks to begin next year, although he
    acknowledged that Turkey is still not ready to join the bloc.
    Negotiations are expected to take at least 10 years.

    Analyst Kirsty Hughes, at the London School of Economics, says she
    expects the EU leaders to decide in favor of starting talks with
    Turkey.

    "I think we're going to get the EU leaders saying 'yes' to Turkey,
    that it can start negotiations. That's going to be the big decision
    and the big plus. It's going to come wrapped with some slightly more
    conditional language, perhaps some slightly grudging language, but
    that's what we're looking for on Friday," she says.

    EU diplomats are working on a compromise package that will try to
    satisfy governments that oppose Turkey's eventual membership. One
    diplomat involved in putting together the statement says it will say
    that the negotiations will be open-ended and that their outcome
    cannot be guaranteed.

    The European Parliament, in a non-binding resolution, called on EU
    leaders to open negotiations with Turkey. But the legislators also
    urged Turkey to recognize Cyprus and suggested Ankara acknowledge the
    mass killings of ethnic Armenians from 1915 to 1923.

    Turkey has always denied that such killings occurred, and it refuses
    to recognize the government of Cyprus.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan says his country will say
    "no" to the EU if the bloc imposes what he calls "unacceptable
    conditions" on starting negotiations.

    EU diplomats say the Armenian issue will not be used as a
    pre-condition for Turkish entry talks. But they say that the bloc's
    leaders will urge Turkey to sign a protocol extending its customs
    union with the EU to the 10 members that joined this year, one of
    which is Cyprus. That, they say, would signal a de-facto recognition
    of Cyprus.
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