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ANKARA: Ankara Protocol Dominates Gul's Meeting with EU Officials

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  • ANKARA: Ankara Protocol Dominates Gul's Meeting with EU Officials

    The New Anatolian, Turkey
    April 27 2005

    Ankara Protocol Dominates Gul's Meeting with EU Officials

    The Turkish-European Union Partnership Council met Tuesday in
    Luxembourg. Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul represented Turkey
    at the meeting.

    The main issue discussed during the meeting was the implementation of
    the Ankara Protocol to expand Turkey's EU customs agreement to
    include the EU's 10 new member states, including the Greek Cypriot
    administration.

    The 25-nation EU is to review Ankara's progress in enforcing
    widespread reforms that it wants completed before Turkey starts its
    EU entry talks this October.

    EU leaders made the signing of the protocol a precondition for
    beginning entry talks, making clear that signing it gives no
    guarantee of eventual membership. Besides signing the Ankara
    Protocol, reforming the judicial system and implementing minority
    rights are the other conditions Ankara must meet before beginning
    accession talks.

    Turkey and EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn have argued that the
    protocol does not involve Turkey formally recognizing the Greek
    Cypriot administration, but it is simply the extension of a customs
    union to the 10 new member states which joined last year. Cyprus
    remains divided between the southerly situated Greek Cypriots and the
    Turkish Cypriots to the north. Only the Greek Cypriot part of the
    island acceded to the EU last year. Greek Cypriots rejected a United
    Nations reunification plan in a referendum just before joining the
    EU. Turkish Cypriots voted overwhelmingly in favor of it.

    Foreign Minister Gul said that the membership of one side of Cyprus
    to the EU did not mean the end of the island's problems. "We could
    not forget the Cyprus problem when just one side of the island
    entered the EU," Gul said during a press conference with EU Term
    President Luxembourg's Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn and EU
    Commissioner Rehn. "The center of a solution to the Cyprus problem is
    the UN," Gul added.

    Asselborn said that the EU did not want to lead Turkey by the hand
    during its membership process, but rather to play the role of an
    "instructor."

    Rehn, on the other hand, praised the quick reform process now going
    on in Turkey. Underlining the EU's expectation that the new Turkish
    Penal Code (TCK) is put into effect as scheduled on June 1, Rehn said
    that they want to see progress also in women's rights, cultural
    rights and judicial reforms.

    French surprise for Turkey

    French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier said Monday that France
    expects a long negotiating process for Turkey's EU membership, and
    reiterated that they would bring up the touchy issue of Turkey's
    recognizing the so-called Armenian genocide during the negotiations.
    "We will pose this question and we want a response," Barnier said.
    "The European project is one of reconciliation," he added.

    Earlier this month, the Turkish government called on Armenia to from
    a joint research team to study the killings. Armenia accuses Turkey
    of genocide in the killings of up to 1.5 million Armenians as part of
    a campaign to force them out of eastern Turkey during World War I.
    Ankara denies these accusations.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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