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  • Commission to approve framework for Turkey talks

    Commission to approve framework for Turkey talks

    Euractiv, Belgium
    June 29 2005

    In Short:

    The scheduled 29 June Commission approval of a negotiating framework
    for Turkey will be the latest act in Ankara's quest for EU membership
    talks. However, upcoming elections in Germany may make this less
    than certain.

    Background:

    Turkey's decades-old quest for membership of the EU turns into the
    finishing straight when on 29 June the Commission reveals its draft
    road map for accession talks with Ankara. The document will set out
    the principles, procedures and issues for the planned negotiations.

    Issues:

    The negotiating framework will have to be approved by all 25 EU
    member states in order for talks to start on schedule on 3 October.
    Following discussions at member state level, the national governments
    are not likely to meet on the issue before September. Analysts point
    out that the same month is likely to see elections in Germany. The
    widely predicted election victory there of the conservative Christian
    Democrats might muddy the waters since it would mean the replacement
    at the country's helm of the pro-Turkey Chancellor Schröder with the
    CDU's Angela Merkel, who believes that Ankara should not join the
    Union as a full member.

    Failure by the 25 member states to approve the road map may mean that
    the 3 October date will have to be pushed back.

    According to EU sources, the terms laid down in the Commission's road
    map for Turkey will be markedly tougher than those that applied to
    the ten new member states that joined in 2004. In general, Turkey -
    and also Croatia - will be expected to not only promise reforms but
    also to implement them during the negotiations, which are expected
    to last way over a decade.

    The negotiating framework will also call on Ankara to "normalise"
    its relations with all EU member states, including continued efforts
    to reach a settlement in Cyprus, and to maintain good neighbourly
    ties with neighbouring Armenia, Greece and the Kurds.

    Positions:

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is firm in his stance
    that Ankara will not renegotiate anything over its EU membership bid.
    "If you impose new things on countries from one day to the next,
    especially at a time when negotiations are about to start, that would
    not be right. We are used to honest politics, that's what we expect
    and want," he said.

    In Erdogan's opinion, "If they [the EU's leaders] intend to preserve
    the EU as a Christian union, they should say so. This would, of course,
    mean the rejection of their current Constitution. We are here because
    we see the EU as a union of common political values. If Turkey doesn't
    join, the EU will become an ineffective Christian group," he said.

    In a recent interview with the Italian daily La Repubblica, Commission
    Vice President Franco Frattini said that "It would be a wrong choice
    to break commitments. Then we'll be sending a message the EU doesn't
    want the Islamic world. We've been calling on Turkey for years to
    continue its reforms. [...] Depriving Turkey of the opportunity to
    start negotiations with the EU as scheduled is a mistake that we
    should avoid," said Frattini.

    "We have to suspend enlargement at least until the institutions have
    been modernised," French Interior Minister and presidential hopeful
    Nicolas Sarkozy has said. "Europe cannot enlarge indefinitely."

    "Sweden wants the start of membership talks with Turkey on 3 October
    in accordance with the 17 December decision of EU leaders," said the
    speaker of the Swedish Parliament, Björn von Sydow.

    In an article published by the German daily Bild, Polish President
    Aleksandr Kwasniewski has said that it would be an "extremely narrow
    policy" for the EU to close its doors on Turkey. "What will we say to
    Ukraine, the Balkan countries and Turkey? How can we persuade these
    countries to move ahead towards democracy and a free market economy?"
    he queried in the article.

    "We have to halt the negotiations with Turkey," argued former
    Commissioner Frits Bolkestein in the Belgian weekly Humo.

    European Socialist Party President Poul Nyrup Rasmussen has told the
    Austrian daily Der Standard that, with Turkey, "membership talks are
    set to start on 3 October, and the date cannot be changed, but the
    accession will surely be shifted to a later date [...] A generation
    has to pass. That is, 20 or 25 years need to pass, so by 2025 or 2030".

    According to Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul, there will be no
    delay in the opening of his country's accession talks.

    Latest & next steps:


    On 29 June 2005, the Commission is scheduled to approve the negotiating
    framework for Turkey By the end of September, the framework must be
    approved by all 25 member states On 3 October 2005, accession talks
    are scheduled to be opened with Ankara

    --Boundary_(ID_bWEiW8+7EcjQxMwMJLLftw)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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