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ANKARA: The Ball is in Brussels's Court

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  • ANKARA: The Ball is in Brussels's Court

    Zaman, Turkey via JTW, Turkey
    March 15 2005

    The Ball is in Brussels's Court
    Abdulhamit Bilici

    Columnist Abdulhamit Bilici comments on Foreign Minister Abdullah
    Gul's current official visit to Britain and Turkey's European Union
    membership bid. A summary of his column is as follows:


    `British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw, who received our Foreign
    Minister Abdullah Gul yesterday in London, said that Turkey was quite
    ready to sign the protocol extending its Customs Union with present
    EU members to all the new states. `The ball is now in Brussels'
    court,' Straw said at a joint press conference following his meeting
    with Gul. For his part, Gul stressed that preparations to start
    membership negotiations with the EU in October were on track. Asked
    whether Greek Cypriot leader Tassos Papadopoulos could put increased
    pressure on Brussels to slow down Turkey's EU process, Straw said
    that Britain has no wish to deal with any further problems on the
    Cyprus issue now, because it is high time for Ankara and Brussels to
    focus on the start of negotiations. Prior to his visit to the
    country, Gul was hoping to get London's support for ending the
    isolation of the Turkish Cypriots, because Britain will this July
    take over the EU term presidency from the current president,
    Luxembourg. Gul yesterday said that he hoped positive steps would
    soon be taken on the issue.



    Gul yesterday was first interviewed by a Financial Times reporter,
    then had lunch with prominent representatives of British finance
    circles. Later he addressed members of the London office of
    Bloomberg, the information technology giant, where he called on
    British businessmen to participate in the privatizations of big
    companies in Turkey. Gul was then asked many questions by these
    businessmen covering a variety of subjects, including such sensitive
    ones as the Armenian problem and the ruling Justice and Development
    Party's (AKP) Islamic roots.



    `What would happen if an independent Kurdish state were established
    in northern Iraq?' asked one businessman. `This would plunge the
    region into greater chaos,' Gul warned. `All ethnic groups must see
    themselves as Iraqis. We don't want any further turmoil in the
    region. What would Arabs say to such a division? Not only Turks but
    also all regional countries want to protect Iraq's territorial
    integrity.'



    Gul also delivered a speech at the London School of Economics. It was
    quite interesting that he was asked many more questions about the
    heavy-handed police action last week to control a women's rights
    demonstration on the eve of the government's talks with top EU
    officials, rather than Turkey's current reforms. Gul stressed that a
    full investigation on the incident was underway whose findings would
    be announced in a few days. Because of a demonstration by a radical
    leftist group in front of the school, Gul had to leave the building
    by the back door.'
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