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Turkey agrees to E.U. entry talks after Cyprus deal

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  • Turkey agrees to E.U. entry talks after Cyprus deal

    Deutsche Presse-Agentur
    December 17, 2004, Friday
    17:47:07 Central European Time

    Turkey agrees to E.U. entry talks after Cyprus deal

    Brussels (dpa) - Turkey and the European Union on Friday clinched a
    long-sought deal allowing Ankara to begin membership talks with the
    bloc next year - but only after a diplomatic fudge resolved the
    fraught issue of Turkish recognition for Cyprus.

    "The European Union (E.U.) has opened its door to Turkey," said
    European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso in a move ending 40
    years of Turkish efforts to get a road map to join the Union.

    E.U. leaders agreed to open accession negotiations on October 3, 2005
    aimed at full Turkish membership.

    "We have been writing history today," said Dutch Prime Minister Jan
    Peter Balkenende who holds the rotating E.U. presidency, adding:
    "Turkey has accepted the hand we offered to them."

    British Prime Minister Tony Blair was also upbeat: "It's a good day
    for Europe, for Turkey and for the wide world," said Blair who
    strongly backs Turkish E.U. membership.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan took a more cautious
    view, saying: "We have done it ... the process will be difficult and
    full of obstacles."

    He admitted Turkey was not "100 per cent satisfied."

    The sense of achievement over the landmark deal was soured by discord
    over Cyprus which came to a head earlier Friday.

    A further major damper on the mood was a surprise announcement by
    Austrian Chancellor Wolfgang Schuessel - who was never enthusiastic
    about Turkey - that his country would hold a referendum on Turkish
    E.U. membership.

    "It is important that the Austrian people have their say," said
    Schuessel. Polls in many E.U. countries, including Austria, Germany
    and France currently show a majority opposing Turkish admission.

    French President Jacques Chirac, who also intends to hold a national
    referendum on the issue, struck a note of caution by insisting that
    "negotiations do not mean accession".

    "We cannot foresee the results...," Chirac said, adding that E.U.
    states could at any time suspend talks if there was slippage in
    Turkey's reform efforts.

    The disagreement over Cyprus was settled by a finely-tuned diplomatic
    fudge under which Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan only
    agreed verbally to recognise the Greek Cypriot part of the island
    before accession talks begin next year. Erdogan refused to sign any
    document on this question.

    European Union (E.U.) leaders welcomed Erdogan's commitment to do so,
    and - in a move to make things official - they promptly added his
    words as an annex to the summit's final communique.

    Under the hard-won agreement, Erdogan promised that before Turkey
    begins E.U. accession negotiations, he will sign an extension of
    Ankara's customs union agreement to include Cyprus, which joined the
    E.U. as part of a group of 10 new members last May.

    Balkenende admitted this was "not formal legal recognition" of Cyprus
    by Turkey. But E.U. diplomats say this would amount to de facto
    recognition.

    This was denied by Erdogan who said: "It in no way means the
    recognition of Cyprus."

    Most Turks already feel their country has made massive efforts to
    meet Cyprus reunification demands. Both Turkey and the self-styled
    state of Turkish northern Cyprus backed a U.N. blueprint for
    unification last April. But the deal was torpedoed by a referendum
    held in Greek Cyprus.

    Turkey presently only recognises northern Cyprus and not the
    internationally-recognised Greek Cypriot southern part of the island.

    The deal to open talks with Moslem Turkey is a major turning point
    for the E.U. which until now has been a mainly Christian club.

    Turkey faces a huge task in meeting E.U. standards and European
    Commission chief Barroso said his message to Turks was simple: "This
    is not the end of the process, this is the beginning."

    Erdogan's much-praised reforms are seen by the E.U. as just a start
    and Ankara's lengthy "to do" list includes major improvements in
    political and economic structures.

    E.U. leaders say Turkey must make additional effort to meet the
    bloc's "Copenhagen Criteria" which include strict standards for human
    rights, minority protection and rule of law.

    More challenging for Erodgan are Europe's calls for what many in
    Turkey will see as a social revolution.

    Women's rights, religious freedom and difficult historic questions
    from Turkey's past, including the fate of Armenians during World War
    I, still need to be addressed.

    Countries such as France have officially declared the killing of up
    to 1.5 million Christian Armenians in 1915 under the Ottoman Empire
    to have been a genocide. This is strongly denied by Turkey which says
    far fewer Armenians died and that this was part of the normal course
    of war.

    "The process of E.U. construction is based on dialogue and
    recognition of past errors," said France's Chirac, adding that the
    Armenian issue would undoubtedly figure in the French referendum. dpa
    lm si
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