Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkish PM's visit to France re-opens debate on EU membership

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Turkish PM's visit to France re-opens debate on EU membership

    EUbusiness, UK
    July 19 2004

    Turkish PM's visit to France re-opens debate on EU membership



    A three-day visit to France by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan starting Monday re-opened the debate as to whether Turkey, a
    secular country with nearly 70 million Muslims, should be admitted
    into the European Union.

    Most French newspapers dedicated significant coverage to the visit
    and examined the question, which has divided the political class.

    President Jacques Chirac's ruling conservative Union for a Popular
    Movement (UMP) has come out against the idea, even though Chirac
    himself favours Turkey eventually joining the EU but does not see it
    as ready yet. The opposition Socialists are backing Ankara's bid.

    Erdogan's visit is seen as a key opportunity to persuade an EU
    heavyweight to back the accession bid before the European Commission
    released in October a report on Turkey's democratisation progress.

    That report is to form the basis of a decision EU leaders will make
    in December on whether to formally open membership talks with Turkey.


    In a sign of the issue's sensitivity, Chirac will not receive Erdogan
    until Tuesday.

    French Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin will play host by greeting
    Erdogan at his official offices after his arrival late Monday.

    During his time in Paris, the Turkish leader will meet other
    political leaders, business chiefs and representatives of France's
    Turkish community.

    Liberation, a left-leaning daily, firmly planted the Turkish flag in
    the EU in an editorial, saying that, while Turkey was historically
    separate from Europe, its common adherence to secularity meant it
    ought to join European institutions.

    "There is no convincing reason to think that Islam is not by its
    essence incompatible with democracy and secularity," it said.

    The right-leaning Le Figaro, however, listed reasons to doubt
    Turkey's readiness, among them cultural differences, "the reality of
    the genocide of the Armenians" in 1915 during the disintegration of
    the Ottoman Empire and the continuing "military occupation in the
    north of Cyprus".

    It tempered that position a little by printing an essay by a
    political science professor, Dominique Reynie, who noted that Turkey
    was a member of NATO and the Organisation for Economic Cooperation
    and Development, had a separation of religion and state, and allowed
    women to vote.

    "All of democratic Turkey has placed its hopes in an opening of
    negotiations," he wrote.

    But a companion essay by a UMP deputy, Jacques Myard, warned of a
    "utopian" vision of a vast "federal Europe" encompassing Turkey which
    would fail because of "the clash of cultures and national realities".


    Chirac has taken a cautious stance on Turkey, at the risk of being
    seen as blowing hot and cold.

    In April, he said he wanted to Turkey eventually admitted, but --
    just days before the bloc expanded to 25 states by taking in mainly
    former Communist central European countries -- he said conditions for
    entry were still some way off.

    Then last month, US President George W. Bush raised European hackles
    by putting his weight behind Turkey's bid in the hopes that it would
    become an example for other Muslim states to follow.

    "I will remind the people of this good country that you ought to be
    given a date by the EU for your eventual acceptance into the EU,"
    Bush said in Ankara on June 27 before attending a NATO summit in
    Istanbul.

    Chirac, who has maintained prickly relations with Bush since the
    run-up to the US invasion of Iraq, shot back that the US leader had
    gone too far.

    "It would be like me telling the United States how to run its affairs
    with Mexico," he said.
Working...
X