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Europe's Greens meet to debate Turkey's EU access

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  • Europe's Greens meet to debate Turkey's EU access

    Agence France Presse
    Oct 19 2004

    Europe's Greens meet to debate Turkey's EU access
    AFP: 10/19/2004
    ISTANBUL, Oct 19 (AFP) - Europe's Greens, once Turkey's most vocal
    critics and now the staunchest supporters of its EU membership, began
    a three-day parliamentary group meeting here Tuesday with strong
    criticism against any plans to hold national referendums on whether
    Ankara should join the bloc.

    "We are against holding referendums in one country about another
    country," Greens group president Daniel Cohn-Bendit said. "There are
    seven million Turks living in Europe, so the real question in the
    referendum will be, 'Do you like Turks -- do you like Muslims?'"

    He singled out President Jacques Chirac, criticising his proposal to
    amend the French constitution to allow referendums on future EU
    members as "foolish" and "ridiculous."

    "How can a democratic president, even Chirac, say what will happen in
    10 years' time?" Cohn-Bendit asked at a press conference here opening
    the meeting.

    "Are they going to have referendums on the memberships of Romania,
    Bulgaria, Bosnia? The French will go crazy!" he said. "This is
    ridiculous. Don't waste our time with what will happen in 10 years."

    Cohn-Bendit was flanked at the press conference by co-chair Monica
    Frassoni of Italy, Dutchman Joost Logendijk and Germany's Cem
    Oezdemir, both of the EU-Turkey joint parliamentary committee.

    Cohn-Bendit urged Turkey to accept the fact that it is different from
    other candidate countries and that a special negotiating process is
    needed to allow it into the EU.

    A generally favorable European Commission report on October 6 advises
    EU leaders to agree at a December 17 summit in Brussels to launch
    membership talks with Turkey.

    "When you say, 'We want equal treatment,' you do not mean it,"
    Cohn-Bendit said. "Turkey is not Malta, it is not Romania, it is not
    Bulgaria. It is a big country, it is a proud country, and its entry
    into the EU will be an important event."

    He said the Greens had arrived in Turkey as "critical friends" in
    hopes that many issues that remain to be ironed out -- the situation
    of the Kurds and other minorities, women's rights, the Armenian
    massacres -- could be "openly discussed among friends."

    "We must have uncomfortable discussions on, for example, Cyprus and
    the role of the army," Frassoni said, adding: "The process of
    building a European democracy is not finished."

    The Greens support Turkey's EU membership, the Italian MEP said, but
    so does Italy's conservative Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi -- "his
    reasons are not the same as ours," she added.

    "What is the Greens' message to Turkey?" asked Oezdemir, who is of
    Turkish origin. "The message is that we are here and not somewhere
    else.

    "If Turkey is today at another point than where it was several yuears
    ago, it is also because of civil society, not only because of
    politicians," he said.

    Another message from the Greens to Turkey's politicians, Logendijk
    said, is: "Don't panic."

    He said the Commission report contained elements Turkey and the
    Greens both disagree with, such as the open-ended nature of the talks
    and mention of permanent derogations concerning this country, such as
    barring its citizens from free circulation in Europe.

    "But," he said, "don't lose your focus, don't lose sight of the main
    point: (membership) negotiations should begin next year."

    The meeting of the joint Greens/European Free Alliance group next
    goes into a series of panel conferences covering aspects of Turkey-EU
    ties.

    Panelists include foreign ministers Joschka Fischer of Germany and
    Abdullah Gul of Turkey, Kurdish activist Leyla Zana and Turkish
    novelist Orhan Pamuk.
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