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Erdogan: No to conditional approval at December summit

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  • Erdogan: No to conditional approval at December summit

    Turkish Daily News
    22 July 2004

    Erdogan: No to conditional approval at December summit

    The prime minister says the December summit will be the time for decision on
    accession talks, not for membership of Turkey and he is confident that a
    reversal at the summit would not be a fatal blow

    ANKARA - Turkish Daily News
    Turkey is not over-ambitious to get membership in the European Union and it
    would stick to its reform process even after a failure in its drive for
    accession, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said.

    He was speaking in France, where public skepticism over Turkey's membership
    runs high, after talks with President Ahmet Necdet Sezer and Prime Minister
    Jean-Pierre Raffarin.

    The prime minister moved to address French concerns, saying Turkey's
    membership would be a blow to the thesis of a clash of civilizations and
    bring economic benefits to both France and the EU and conveying the message
    to the French leaders that Turkey is making the changes required to meet the
    so-called Copenhagen criteria for membership and is counting on France not
    to withdraw its support.

    But he said a failure to get into the union would not be the end of the
    world. "Turkey doesn't ask to join at any price. Joining the EU is not a
    must for Turkey," Erdogan said at a press conference. "We have embraced the
    Copenhagen criteria in order to raise the living standards of our people. If
    this (the membership bid) fails, we would rename the Copenhagen criteria to
    Ankara criteria and carry on with our path."

    EU leaders will decide in their mid-December summit whether Turkey is fit to
    start the long-delayed accession talks. An EU Commission report which will
    be released in autumn will largely shape the December decision. In meeting
    with Erdogan, Chirac reiterated French position that Paris would await the
    Commission's assessment.

    A spokeswoman for Chirac told reporters after the meeting that Turkey's
    entry into the 25-nation bloc was "desirable as soon as it actually becomes
    possible. "Turkey has made considerable progress. It should continue and
    intensify the implementation of democratic and economic reforms," Chirac's
    spokeswoman quoted him as telling Erdogan.

    Erdogan suggested that there was no reason for the EU leaders to be
    hesitant, saying the December summit would make the decision on talks with
    Turkey, not on the membership. "We don't know if the accession process will
    take five years or ten years. This is something that depends on our
    performance throughout the talks process," he said at the press conference.

    Conditional approval not acceptable
    The prime minister also said that Turkey cannot be held to a higher standard
    than the other EU members or the two nations hoping to join in 2007, Romania
    and Bulgaria.

    "The EU regulations do not allow a conditional date for talks or conditional
    approval of membership. Conditions are clear and we have so far worked
    towards meeting them," Erdogan said. He warned a conditional go-ahead for
    talks at the December summit would undermine the EU's credibility.

    Employment concerns
    The prime minister also moved to address European worries that entry of
    Turkey, a country with a population of 70 million, saying Turkish membership
    would not lead to difficulties in employment in Europe.

    "We acquired the right for the free circulation of labor in 1985. Turkish
    labor should have been roaming across Europe since then. We have never tried
    to impose things on Europe since then and we are ready now to make the
    necessary pledges," said the prime minister.

    He argued instead that Turkish accession would help the EU reach out to the
    Islamic world.

    Economic relations
    While in France, the prime minister also highlighted the bilateral economic
    relations between Turkey and France and prospects of further cooperation in
    an attempt to woo both the politicians and business leaders.

    "France is ranked first among countries investing most in Turkey. Our trade
    volume stands around $7 billion," Erdogan said, adding that French companies
    were also bidding in serious privatization tenders in Turkey.

    Turkish and French authorities agreed on purchase of some 36 planes by the
    Turkish Airlines (THY) from the French-German maker Airbus and discussed
    French participation in Turkey's plans to build nuclear energy plants.

    No crisis with Israel
    Responding to questions on Turkey's relations with Israel, Erdogan
    underlined that there was no crisis between Ankara and Tel Aviv and
    explained his recent criticisms of Israeli actions against Palestinians were
    simply a "warning from a friend."

    "There is no crisis between Turkey and Israel," Erdogan said. "I have told a
    fact and I have to tell this. These are not things that would overshadow our
    economic, trade and military ties," he said.

    'Armenian genocide' no condition for EU
    Erdogan also touched on the issue of an alleged genocide at the hands of the
    late Ottoman Empire against Armenians, saying the Armenian allegations did
    not constitute a membership criterion.

    He reportedly told a meeting with members of the French Parliament's Foreign
    Relations Committee that Armenia was making a mistake by trying to keep the
    genocide allegations alive all the time.

    "People do not want a world driven by hatred and enmity. They want to see
    leaders who can remove them. Hand in hand, we'll resolve them," Erdogan said
    at his press conference.
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