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  • ROUNDUP: E.U. set to okay Turkey entry talks - with conditions

    Deutsche Presse-Agentur
    December 16, 2004, Thursday
    12:27:43 Central European Time

    ROUNDUP: E.U. set to okay Turkey entry talks - with conditions

    Brussels

    European Union leaders are expected to approve opening membership
    talks with Turkey at a summit Thursday, but the historic decision
    will be tempered with warnings Ankara must meet tough standards and
    that negotiations will take over a decade.

    "The time to start negotiations with Turkey has come," said European
    Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso, adding that Ankara "must go
    the extra mile" and show its allegiance to core European values.

    Turkey, which has been seeking to join the European Union (E.U.) for
    over 40 years, is expected to be told at the bloc's two-day summit
    that accession talks can begin in the second half of 2005.

    But two key sticking points remain, said diplomats.

    First, is Turkey's refusal to grant diplomatic recognition to E.U.
    member state Cyprus which despite its non-recognition by Ankara is
    still expected to give a green light to opening E.U. talks. The
    decision by E.U. leaders must be unanimous.

    "What kind of message does it send when you do not recognise all the
    members of the club you want to join?" asked Barroso.

    The Commission chief said Cyprus was a test of Turkey's willingness
    to "win over the hearts and minds of everyone in Europe."

    E.U. leaders want Turkey to agree to extend a customs union pact with
    the bloc to all new E.U. states, including Cyprus, which joined the
    Union in May this year.

    But Ankara, which only recognises self-styled Turkish northern
    Cyprus, has so far refused to do this.

    Observers expect the E.U. to fudge the issue at the summit and issue
    a declaration saying they welcome "the intention" of Turkey to extend
    customs union.

    Asked about calls by France for Turkey to recognise the killing of up
    to 1.5 million Christian Armenians under the Ottoman Empire in 1915
    as a genocide, Barroso said the question would have to be up for
    frank discussion.

    But he underlined this should take place at a later date and that no
    new political terms should be set prior to the start of E.U.
    accession negotiations. Turkey rejects the label of genocide with
    regard to the Armenians.

    The second summit sticking point is what wording will be used to make
    clear to Ankara that negotiations will be open-ended and their
    successful outcome is not guaranteed.

    A senior German official said full membership for Ankara was the E.U.
    goal and demands by a minority of member states, led by Austria, for
    setting an option of second class membership - a so-called
    "privileged partnership" - was not on the cards.

    "That issue is dead," added an E.U. diplomat.

    Austria as well as France and Denmark, remain nervous about admitting
    a large, poor and mainly Moslem state with 70 million people to what
    has until now been a mainly Christian club.

    A German opinion poll this week showed just 15 per cent back giving
    Turkey full E.U. membership. Turks, numbering 2.4 million, are
    Germany's biggest minority.

    "Obviously there are problems with public opinion in some member
    states," admitted Barroso who stressed that final admission for
    Turkey would have to come from all 25 E.U. countries.

    Given these concerns, E.U. leaders will tell Turkey improvements are
    needed to meet the 25-nation bloc's Copenhagen Criteria which include
    standards for human rights, minority protection and rule of law.

    Ankara will also be told that further economic reforms are needed as
    well as moves to ensure the traditionally strong role of the military
    in the country is curbed.

    Concern over large numbers of Turkish immigrants flooding into the
    E.U. has led the Dutch E.U. presidency to seek giving individual
    member states a long-term right to impose controls on the movement of
    people.

    E.U. member states are not the only ones on edge. Turkish Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has warned in recent days that Turkey
    will not accept membership at any cost.

    Also on the E.U. summit agenda is a further enlargement issue: the
    bloc's leaders are expected to announce membership talks have been
    concluded with Bulgaria and Romania.

    But the two countries, which failed to make the grade for the E.U.'s
    10 nation expansion last May 1, will be told they still must make
    progress in a number of areas including justice and corruption and
    that planned accession in 2007 could be delayed until 2008.

    The summit is likely to approve opening membership talks with Croatia
    in March or April next year conditional on Zagreb's cooperating with
    war crimes trials linked to the conflicts in former Yugoslavia.

    Croatia, which could also join by 2008 or 2009, would be the second
    former Yugoslav state to become an E.U. member following Slovenia
    which joined last May 1. dpa lm si jm
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