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Chirac to defend his backing for Turkey's talks with EU

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  • Chirac to defend his backing for Turkey's talks with EU

    Financial Times (London, England)
    December 15, 2004 Wednesday
    London Edition 1

    Chirac to defend his backing for Turkey's talks with EU

    By JOHN THORNHILL

    PARIS

    Jacques Chirac will tonight give a rare television interview to
    explain why he favours opening accession talks with Turkey while the
    majority of his compatriots oppose the idea.

    The French president will have to be at his persuasive best, just two
    days before European Union leaders are expected to approve a European
    Commission recommendation to start entry talks with Turkey.

    An opinion poll published by Le Figaro newspaper this week showed 67
    per cent of French voters opposed Turkey's entry, making France the
    most sceptical of the EU's big countries. Resistance runs even higher
    among Mr Chirac's own party, with 71 per cent of UMP supporters
    against Turkish membership.

    There are several reasons why Turkey's admission inflames such debate
    in France, ranging from esoteric arguments about the dilution of the
    EU's essence to scarcely veiled Islamophobia on the extreme right.

    Many MPs are also angry that Mr Chirac has not allowed them more of a
    say on such an important issue. The government allowed a
    parliamentary debate in October on Turkey but did not subject itself
    to a binding vote.

    Sylvie Goulard, a political science professor, says that if Turkey
    were admitted to the EU - becoming its biggest and poorest member
    state - it would kill the dream of Europe's founders of an ever
    deeper and closer union. The French government's failure to initiate
    a proper debate on this issue has created a public backlash.

    "If you want to change the whole European project then you have to
    take into account the views of the people," she says. "But they have
    refused until now to talk to the public and that is why they are in a
    mess."

    France's Armenian population, estimated at about 300,000, has also
    been influential, highlighting Turkey's refusal to accept
    responsibility for the Armenian genocide of 1915 and Ankara's poor
    human rights record.

    The French government has scrambled to mollify public opinion by
    insisting that the future is not pre-ordained, that Turkey's possible
    admission is more than a decade away, and that voters will be given
    their say on Turkey's membership in a referendum. French diplomats
    have also been exploring the possibility of offering Ankara a
    "privileged partnership" with the EU.

    Moreover, Michel Barnier, the French foreign minister, has this week
    attempted to parry criticisms from the Armenian community by urging
    Ankara to face up to its past.

    Opinion polls show that many French voters could be persuaded to
    change their minds on Turkey's membership if Ankara fulfilled its
    promises to reform over the next decade.

    Even Harout Mardirossian, president of the Committee for the Defence
    of the Armenian Cause, says it is possible to imagine a thoroughly
    reformed Turkey being admitted into the EU. "A Turkey that recognises
    the Armenian genocide, a Turkey that accepts the Kurds, a Turkey that
    respects human rights and evacuates Cyprus would no longer be the
    Turkey we see today. In this sense, we do not want to shut the door
    to Turkey."

    But Mr Chirac is staking an enormous amount on Turkey's ability to
    deliver on reform. In the meantime, he risks isolation within his own
    party and among the public. His great fear is that the intensity of
    the Turkey debate could yet infect next year's referendum on the EU
    constitutional treaty. Turkey's elite, Page 21
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