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Turkish PM basks in EU triumph

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  • Turkish PM basks in EU triumph

    Turkish PM basks in EU triumph
    Nicolas Rothwell, Middle East correspondent

    The Australian
    Dec 20 2004

    TURKEY'S reformist Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the man behind
    his country's successful bid to stage an entry to the European club,
    returned home to his capital in triumph yesterday, and basked in a
    ticker-tape parade before his jubilant supporters.

    Mr Erdogan, a convinced democrat at the head of an Islamic-flavoured
    party, was greeted by thousands in Ankara's central square.

    Confetti filled the air, and fireworks were let off in broad daylight
    as he addressed the crowds in near-freezing temperatures.

    The celebrations capped a week of high tension as the Turks watched
    the progress of the Brussels summit, where Ankara's bid to secure a
    date for accession talks with the European Union was almost derailed
    at the last moment.

    Mr Erdogan, a politician who combines pragmatism and intense emotional
    commitment, seized the high ground at once on his return, committing
    his Government and nation to the path of continued social reforms
    and economic development.









    Despite fringe protests by hard-line leftists and right-wing
    nationalists, Mr Erdogan stands at the head of a united country,
    and his authority, after the drama of the Brussels summit and his
    high-octane performance there, stands at a new level.

    "Turkey has now turned a critical corner," Mr Erdogan proclaimed,
    to rolling cheers, as his listeners waved the Turkish flag and the
    European Union banner.

    "Our road is open, and you should not have any doubt about it. From
    now on, democracy will have a different meaning – human rights and
    freedoms will be practised in a more meaningful manner, and the economy
    will perform better. Turkey will take its rightful place among modern
    and civilised countries."

    These heady claims, and the general atmosphere of euphoria, have
    combined to make this an extraordinary time across the diverse
    nation of 70 million people, stretching from the frontiers of Iran
    and Armenia to the Black Sea and the Mediterranean.

    Unalloyed national exultation of this kind has not been seen in Europe
    since the collapse of Eastern communism in 1989.

    Mr Erdogan's words, and his broad message of progress, repeated
    constantly in recent weeks, places him firmly in the tradition of the
    nation's Westernising founder, Kemal Ataturk, whose name has been on
    everybody's lips in recent days.

    Mr Erdogan himself, in his proud and controlled performance at his
    first press conference after the EU decision, pointedly invoked
    Ataturk, and referred to Turkey's European trajectory as a "second
    great national revolution".

    Mr Erdogan's work, though, is only just beginning. European leaders,
    still sceptical about the implications of admitting a vast, rapidly
    expanding and still-developing Muslim state into their union, have
    stressed it may take 15 years before full membership is possible,
    and they have refused to guarantee a successful conclusion to the
    Turkish negotiations.

    The critical stumbling block at the summit was Ankara's position
    on Cyprus.

    Turkey occupies the northern part of the island and has for decades
    refused to recognise the southern Republic of Cyprus – a full EU
    member since May this year.

    By giving an oral pledge on Friday to expand an EU trade protocol,
    Ankara provided an intent to grant technical recognition to Cyprus,
    and this highly unpopular concession will have to be finessed through
    parliament by the Erdogan Government before the formal talks with
    Europe begin on 3 October 2005.

    "Our sensitivity about the issue is beyond comparison," Mr Erdogan
    insisted, while his Foreign Minister and key lieutenant in the talks,
    Abdullah Gul, stressed there would be no recognition of Cyprus until
    a lasting solution to the island's political impasse has been found.

    Turkey's treatment of its Kurdish minority also remains a chief
    concern of EU member states, and assuaging European doubts on this
    front will be one of the main tasks of the Government in Ankara over
    the years ahead.

    Kurdish leaders placed advertisements in European papers last week
    appealing for quasi-autonomous status for the region: a move the
    Turks will not condone, given their sensitivity to the threat of
    territorial carve-up and the distinct possibility a Kurdish state
    may emerge across the border in the north of war-torn Iraq.

    Turkey under Mr Erdogan has transformed conditions in the Kurdish
    southeastern region by permitting the public use of the Kurdish
    language and removing pressure on Kurdish political leaders.

    Mr Erdogan also faces the difficult task of maintaining his country's
    strong, and newly revived, sense of national unity during a period
    of further sharp social and economic changes. He addressed this
    point obliquely yesterday in pledging that all Turks, those from the
    rural far east as much as those from the busy metropolis of Istanbul,
    were of equal value.

    Hard days lie ahead, as even Mr Erdogan's most ardent admirers in
    Turkey's fractious media concede: the road before the country in its
    bid for full admittance to the EU is still a long one.

    But the sense of delight and fulfilment is keen, after almost four
    decades of slow progress towards this goal. "We succeeded," exclaimed
    the weekend edition of the leading newspaper, Hurriyet – and of that,
    at least, there could be no doubt.

    --Boundary_(ID_zvKrouxzFdgeQg0S0IyxwQ)--
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