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EU Must Honour Its Promise To Turkey

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  • EU Must Honour Its Promise To Turkey

    EU MUST HONOUR ITS PROMISE TO TURKEY

    FT
    September 5 2005 03:00

    Amid predictable jostle and dissent, the European Union still looks
    likely to agree to start accession negotiations with Turkey in a
    month's time. Even though the EU is now paralysed by the French and
    Dutch rejection of the constitutional treaty this summer, most member
    states appear to understand that to welch on the commitment made to
    Turkey at last December's summit would further damage the Union.

    That commitment is conditional on Turkey meeting the Copenhagen
    criteria on human, democratic and minority rights reforms - a charter
    that has already gone far to transform Turkish political and civic
    life. But this exercise is about a great deal more than carrying out
    a sort of moral inventory on a prospective new family member.

    France, Germany, Austria and Cyprus have all raised objections to
    Turkish entry, some of which they could turn into roadblocks.

    For some, especially Christian Democrat politicians in the heart
    of what was once the Austro-Hungarian empire, the Turks are, as it
    were, still at the gates of Vienna. Beyond the challenges of the EU
    embracing a poor and populous country, for them the point is that
    Turkey is Muslim and not really European. That is the nub of German
    and Austrian objections.

    In France, Dominique de Villepin, prime minister, has said it is
    inconceivable that the EU can start talks with Turkey until Ankara
    recognises Cyprus - the Greek Cypriot state granted entry to the
    Union last year despite rejecting a United Nations compromise over
    the divided island that Turkish Cypriots endorsed.

    But things are not quite as bad as they look. Mr de Villepin's
    opportunist remarks are aimed at stealing a march on his rival,
    the openly rejectionist Nicolas Sarkozy. But the man they both want
    to succeed, Jacques Chirac, the president, looks set to assent to
    accession talks. Germany, which will be in the process of forming a
    new government, will probably follow suit, and Austria, still intent
    on offering a "privileged partnership" rather than membership to
    Turkey, would probably hold fire if the EU put Croatia on the path
    to membership. The Greek Cypriots are unpredictable but may not want
    to risk isolation. The real battles over Turkey, in other words,
    will take place down the long road of negotiations that could last
    more than a decade.

    But by then, Turkey will need to have demonstrated not just that
    it can implement the EU's economic legislation. It must show it has
    overcome its authoritarian political instincts.

    It is, to say the least, unfortunate that in the run-up to this
    historic decision Istanbul prosecutors have brought charges of
    denigrating the Turkish state against Orhan Pamuk, the world-renowned
    novelist. His "crime" was to complain about the conspiracy of silence
    about the mass murder of the Ottoman empire's Armenians during and
    after the first world war.

    In the real world, it is inconceivable that Turkey will ever enter
    the EU if it cannot face up to this blood-sodden chapter of its
    history. Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the neo-Islamist prime minister,
    has gone further than his predecessors in calling on international
    scholars to establish the facts, and offering them access to the
    Ottoman archives. Yet a conference to discuss the issue was cancelled
    this spring after pressure from the justice ministry.

    It is not just that Turkey must eventually settle this account with
    history. There could hardly be anything more basic to EU rules than
    free speech.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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