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Chirac tells divided France Turkey belongs in EU if it meets conds.

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  • Chirac tells divided France Turkey belongs in EU if it meets conds.

    Associated Press Worldstream
    December 15, 2004 Wednesday 7:09 PM Eastern Time

    Chirac tells a divided France that Turkey belongs in EU if it meets
    membership conditions

    WILLIAM J. KOLE; Associated Press Writer

    President Jacques Chirac, beset by opposition to Turkey's drive to
    join the European Union, told a divided France that the mostly Muslim
    country belongs in the EU - but that Paris will block negotiations if
    Ankara fails to meet membership conditions.

    "Does Europe, and particularly France, have an interest in Turkey
    joining it? My answer is, 'Yes, if,"' the French leader said
    Wednesday in a nationally televised interview on the eve of an EU
    summit that will decide whether to open membership talks with Ankara
    next year.

    "Yes, if Turkey totally meets the conditions we impose on any
    candidate for our union," Chirac said.

    France reserves the right to block the negotiations if Turkey fails
    to meet the criteria, and the French "will have the last word" on
    admitting the country, he added in a nod to those who have doubts
    about bringing in the Turks.

    Chirac spoke in an interview with TF1 television recorded earlier in
    the day at the presidential Elysee Palace and aired nationwide
    Wednesday evening. EU leaders meeting in Brussels, Belgium, were
    expected to decide on Thursday or Friday whether to launch membership
    negotiations.

    Chirac's support for Turkey's eventual membership has been met with
    grave misgivings among ordinary citizens worried about an influx of
    cheap labor to France, already stung by 10 percent unemployment. Many
    here also question Turkey's human rights record.

    A poll published earlier this week by the newspaper Le Figaro
    suggests two in three French oppose bringing Turkey into the
    25-nation bloc. The Socialist Party is divided over the issue, and
    Jean-Marie Le Pen, leader of the far-right National Front, insists
    Turkey is a country that "cannot be European."

    "Only a rejection of the European constitution can save the French
    from this trap," Le Pen said Wednesday. "This willingness to
    integrate an Asian and Muslim country, against the will of the
    European people, illustrates the noxiousness of Brussels' Europe."

    By throwing his support behind Turkey, Chirac also has broken ranks
    with his own party, the conservative Union for a Popular Movement,
    which favors a "privileged partnership" between the EU and Ankara
    that would fall far short of membership.

    Chirac rejected the idea in Wednesday's interview.

    "To ask a country like Turkey, a great country with a rich and long
    history, to make a considerable effort to reach a risky or partial
    result is not reasonable," he said.

    "We will take a very heavy responsibility for history if, faced with
    a people who tell us, 'We have adopted all your values, all your
    rules, all your objectives,' we tell them, 'Ah, no thanks,"' Chirac
    said.

    Jose Manuel Barroso, president of the European Commission, also
    dismissed the idea, calling it "unjust" and warning that Turkey
    likely would see it as discriminatory.

    Barroso told France-2 television the EU should open membership talks
    with Turkey immediately, insisting "this is the moment," while
    conceding the country has not yet met all the requirements.

    "In 10 years, Turkey won't be the same Turkey as today ... and
    certain fears that exist today can be put aside," he said.

    Although Chirac favors full membership for Turkey, while conceding it
    could take 10 to 15 years, a skeptical Prime Minister Jean-Pierre
    Raffarin argues that the influence of Islam in Turkey would clash
    with Judeo-Christian European values.

    Confronting that argument head-on, Chirac contends that bringing the
    nation of 70 million people into the EU is the best way to tamp down
    Islamic extremism and eliminate what some Europeans see as a threat.

    "After centuries of wars and horrors, we want to leave our children a
    peaceful, stable region without war," Chirac said, describing
    Turkey's accession as part of an EU effort "for peace and stability."

    France also wants the issue of the killing of Armenians in 1915-23 to
    be on the table during membership negotiations, although Foreign
    Minister Michel Barnier has said France will not demand official
    recognition of the killings as a condition for entry.

    The Turks have been accused of committing genocide in the killing of
    as many as 1.5 million Armenians during a campaign to force them from
    eastern Turkey. Ankara vehemently denies it and insists the figure is
    greatly inflated.

    On Wednesday, the European Parliament called on EU leaders to open
    membership talks with Turkey "without undue delay." However, it urged
    Ankara to carry out more democratic reforms, move toward recognizing
    Cyprus and acknowledge the Armenian killings.
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