Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

EU talks Turkey

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • EU talks Turkey

    ic Wales, United Kingdom
    Oct 8 2005

    EU talks Turkey

    Staff Reporter, Western Mail


    At the end of a week that saw the EU agree to formally begin
    membership talks with Turkey, Wales MEP Eluned Morgan gives her
    verdict on the 'Turkey Question.'

    THE European Union's success has always lain in its unique ability to
    draw countries towards peace, democracy and co-operation through the
    magnetic pull of prosperity and stability. This week we witnessed a
    climax of this process as EU countries gave the go-ahead to embark on
    a new and uncharted phase of development.

    On Monday, 18 years after it first applied to join the European Union
    and after days of fierce wrangling, Turkey was finally allowed to
    open formal negotiations on becoming a member. The move has divided
    public opinion, both here and in Turkey. Indeed not since the
    break-up of the Ottoman Empire 100 years ago have Europeans agonised
    so much over the "Turkish question".

    At the European Parliament last year I voted in favour of starting
    these formal negotiations. For someone who as a young member of
    Amnesty International wrote countless letters to Turkish leaders
    appealing for them to improve their human rights record, it was a
    difficult decision. But I believe it was the right one.


    For the EU to have slammed its door on Turkey, and thus symbolically
    the Islamic world, at this terrorist-infested moment in history would
    have been tragic. Turkey's membership talks should be seen more as an
    opportunity for reform and progress than a threat. Moreover, Monday
    night's decision marked the beginning, not the end, of what will be a
    long, difficult process of negotiation for Turkey. Success is by no
    means guaranteed.

    Turkey still has to travel a long and bumpy path of economic, social
    and environmental reform. It is a poor country. Its average income
    per head of population is a mere $US2,790 compared to $5,270 in
    Poland and $28,530 in the UK. Infant mortality rates are telling: 41
    deaths per 1,000 births, a rate twice as bad as either Bulgaria or
    Romania, and far higher than recent EU entrants such as Poland and
    Slovenia.

    The country's recent social reforms also leave much to be desired.
    Little progress has been made on women's rights and not enough is
    being done to tackle "honour killings". Earlier this month acclaimed
    Turkish novelist, Orhan Pamuk, was charged with the "public
    denigrating of Turkish identity" and faces prison merely because he
    claimed certain topics were off-limits in Turkey. There also remains
    a long way to go on relations with Cyprus, Armenia and Turkey's 12
    million Kurds.

    The EU has opened the door for Turkey, but it is just an opening. If
    they fail to make up sufficient ground on the economy, social and
    environmental reform, the door will remain closed.

    But despite the difficulties and the challenges that lie ahead, there
    remains good reason to work towards Turkey's entry into the EU.

    Of course, there are those who argue that Turkey is not "European
    enough", meaning that it is "too Muslim". But the doomsday-style
    prophesies of a "clash of civilisations" are misplaced. Though
    Turkey's people are mainly very religious, it is a fiercely secular
    democracy that has historically enjoyed a close relationship with the
    West.

    Turkey is a founding member of the United Nations, a member of Nato,
    the Council of Europe, the OECD, and an associate member of the
    Western European Union. Modern Turkey is also a fundamental part of
    our lives as modern Europeans. Thousands of Brits holiday there every
    year, belly-dancing is the fitness fad of the moment, and we enjoy
    kebabs.

    We cannot ignore the benefits a closer alliance would provide. Turkey
    lies near the unruly Caucasus republics, the hotspots of Central Asia
    and, of course, the Middle East. It is a leading regional power that
    exerts a stabilising influence on those countries, and it is in
    Europe's long-term interest that Turkey should be firmly anchored
    into the EU.

    Acting as a bridge between Europe and the Middle East, Turkey's
    inclusion in the European Union would be a real boost to our security
    and will help close down a busy and prosperous black market route
    from Asia. Currently 65% of UK asylum applicants and 80% of the UK
    heroin supply comes through Turkey. Common EU standards on law
    enforcement will turn this situation around.

    It is in our own strategic interest to give Turkey a fair chance to
    demonstrate whether it is capable of meeting the EU membership
    conditions.

    And make no mistake, if Turkey meets all these conditions it will be
    quite a different Turkey from the Turkey of today.

    It will be a Turkey where the EU's policies and standards are
    implemented and where the principles of democracy and human rights
    are a daily reality. A Turkey where the rule of law is firmly rooted
    in its society and state. A Turkey where European values successfully
    coexist among a predominantly Muslim population.

    Such a Turkey would prove an invaluable crossroads between East and
    West, Islam and Christianity.
Working...
X