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No half measures, Turkey tells EU

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  • No half measures, Turkey tells EU

    The Australian
    December 16, 2004 Thursday All-round Country Edition

    No half measures, Turkey tells EU

    TURKISH Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan turned up the heat on the
    European Union yesterday, insisting his nation deserved full
    membership and warning that anything less would be a "historic
    mistake".

    In a speech to his party that was frequently interrupted by ovations,
    Mr Erdogan put the onus squarely on the 25-nation EU ahead of
    tomorrow's summit in Brussels.

    He said Turkey, Europe's biggest Muslim nation, had met all criteria
    required to start membership talks, particularly in the areas of
    human rights and political reform. "We, as a country, have done what
    we had to do to start membership talks," he told members of his
    Justice and Development Party. "The rest is the responsibility of the
    EU."

    Tomorrow's meeting is expected to give the green light to accession
    talks with Turkey, but several EU states are pressing for tight
    restrictions on the agreement.

    These include an understanding that Turkey will not join the EU for
    at least a decade and that the talks can be broken off at any time if
    Ankara reverses reforms.

    The agreement is also expected to include conditions designed to
    prevent a flood of Turkish immigrants into richer EU nations.

    However, Mr Erdogan said, Turkey had its own, non-negotiable demands.
    "What needs to be done is clear: unconditional full membership, a
    clear negotiating process without the need for a second decision and
    no new political conditions apart from the Copenhagen criteria," he
    said.

    The Copenhagen criteria are standards that candidate countries must
    fulfil to be eligible for membership talks.

    "We have said on several occasions that we will not accept a decision
    that is not based on full membership and which offers special
    status," Mr Erdogan said.

    "I believe the EU will not approve a historic mistake which will
    weaken its own foundations, and will make a decision in line with
    Turkey's expectations."

    While the EU is expected to approve membership talks with Turkey,
    member states are divided over the detail. There is no agreement on
    when talks should start and some countries support a "special
    partnership" with Ankara should negotiations fail.

    Turkey has categorically rejected such a partnership and insists it
    wants membership talks to start next year.

    Draft summit conclusions leaked to the media warn that talks will be
    suspended if Turkey violates EU principles and they do not guarantee
    that the talks will end in membership.

    "The open-ended nature of negotiations carries a dangerous
    uncertainty not only about the outcome of the negotiations but also
    their objective," Mr Erdogan said.

    "We can keep up our enthusiasm for progress only if all question
    marks over the ultimate target of negotiations are cleared from our
    minds."

    The draft also says the EU reserves the right to impose permanent
    restrictions on freedom of movement in a bid to prevent a massive
    influx of immigrants from Turkey, and adds that Ankara must recognise
    EU member Cyprus.

    In a speech to parliament, Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul
    slammed the proposal for permanent safeguards as illegitimate and
    vowed that Ankara would make no "direct or indirect move" to
    recognise Cyprus unless there was a lasting settlement on the divided
    island.

    Turkey recognises only the self-proclaimed Turkish Republic of
    Northern Cyprus and not the internationally recognised Greek Cypriot
    government in the south.

    France, although nominally on Turkey's side, has also fuelled Turkish
    frustration by using the word genocide for the first time to describe
    the 1915-17 Ottoman Empire massacre of Armenians.

    French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier told parliament yesterday that
    Paris would ask many questions, notably about "the Armenian
    genocide", in eventual membership talks.

    It is French pressure above all that is likely to result in the EU
    failing to abide by a promise to launch accession talks "without
    delay" once the leaders give their approval.

    Fearful of the Turkey question overshadowing a referendum on the EU's
    first constitution, Paris wants the launch of the negotiations put
    back to the second half of next year.

    Such fears are not without foundation given that in France, as in
    Germany, public opinion is largely hostile to Turkey's EU bid.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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