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=?UNKNOWN?Q?Schr=F6der?= Seeks Turkish 'Mentality Change'

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  • =?UNKNOWN?Q?Schr=F6der?= Seeks Turkish 'Mentality Change'

    Schröder Seeks Turkish 'Mentality Change'

    Deutsche Welle, Germany
    May 3 2005

    Before a planned visit to Turkey this week, German Chancellor Gerhard
    Schröder said the country needed a "change in mentality" to make
    reform efforts stick ahead of EU accession talks in October.

    "The reforms must be further implemented, and we should be assured of
    their irreversibility," Schröder told the Turkish daily Milliyet, just
    before his two-day trip to Bosnia and Turkey, which begins on Tuesday.

    The German leader was referring especially to reforms affecting
    fundamental freedoms, as well as minority and human rights. But he
    left no doubts that EU accession negotiations for Turkey would start
    on October 3 as planned.

    The EU accession talks will be the main focus of meetings, planned
    four months ago during an EU summit in Brussels, with Turkish Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and President Ahmet Sezer.

    'Impressive policies'

    In the past weeks, Prime Minister Erdogan has been accused of letting
    his country's reform efforts slip.

    However, Schröder praised the "impressive reform policies" of the
    Turkish government. He noted that Erdogan himself has implied that a
    "change in mentality" is necessary before the policies can be put
    into effect.

    "Such a change in mentality won't take place overnight. But it is
    necessary in order for reforms and changes in the law to become
    everyday, widely accepted practices," Schröder told the newspaper.

    'Difficult' negotiations ahead

    The progress of the reform process will make a decisive difference
    in determining how the developments of the EU talks, Schröder told
    the paper. "The negotiations themselves will certainly be long and
    also difficult."

    The chancellor noted that Turkey needs to enlarge its EU tariff
    agreements with the new member states by October 3 -- which will mean
    a de facto recognition of Cyprus by Ankara.

    "A speedy solution to the Cyprus problem would of course make the
    accession talks much easier,» Schröder said.

    Schröder agreed with Turkey's suggestion of forming a history
    commission to handle discussions of the massacre of Armenians 90
    years ago, in what was then known as the Ottoman Empire.

    EU seeks 'genocide' admission

    In their expulsion from the Ottoman Empire between 1915 and 1923,
    some 1.5 million Armenians died from violence or starvation and
    disease. To date, Ankara has refused to call it genocide, although
    the European Parliament has demanded an admission that Turkey own up
    to the mass killings.

    Prior to his visits to Ankara and Istanbul, Schröder will visit
    Bosnia-Herzegovina. In Sarajevo he'll meet with Prime Minister Adnan
    Terzic, and will visit the EUFOR field camp in Rajlovac, just outside
    of the capital. The German army has had a presence in Bosnia since
    the signing of the peace accord 10 years ago. DW Staff (jen)

    --Boundary_(ID_hB/9J5Uc2sdRo4PCP48gPA)--
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