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  • Turkey: EU Enlargement Commissioner Says Talks Must Not Be Delayed

    Turkey: EU Enlargement Commissioner Says Talks Must Not Be Delayed
    By Ahto Lobjakas

    Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
    Tuesday, 13 September 2005

    (AFP)
    EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn told the European Parliament's
    Foreign Relations Committee today that Turkey has cleared all hurdles
    necessary to start accession talks on 3 October, as planned. However,
    he said EU member states, which must make the final decision on
    Turkey's eventual EU membership, are still hotly debating the issue. A
    key point in this debate is when and if Turkey should recognize the
    Greek government of divided Cyprus, an EU member.


    Brussels, 13 September 2005 (RFE/RL) -- Commissioner Rehn repeated his
    long-held view that the EU has no grounds to delay launching accession
    talks with Turkey.

    He said EU member states gave Turkey two conditions at a summit last
    December, both of which Ankara has now fulfilled.

    `There was a unanimous decision by the European Council that they
    expected Turkey to fulfill two conditions: the entry into force of the
    six pieces of legislation that were essential for the legal and
    political [accession] criteria, and the signature by Turkey of the
    adaptation protocol of the Ankara agreement [creating a customs union
    with the EU] knowing that this would not amount to an explicit, formal
    recognition [of Cyprus]. These two conditions are now met,' Rehn said.

    However, Rehn conceded that EU member states are still locked in what
    he described as `heated' debates. These are expected to culminate in
    an unscheduled meeting of EU foreign ministers in Brussels on 26
    September.

    Before negotiations can start with Turkey, the EU must adopt two key
    documents.

    One is the so-called `negotiating mandate' allowing the European
    Commission to start talks. The other is a `counter-declaration' to a
    statement last July in which Turkey said its extension of the existing
    customs union with the EU -- the so-called Ankara Protocol -- to the
    10 new EU members does not amount to a recognition of Greek Cyprus.

    A previous draft of the counter-declaration urged Turkey to normalize
    its relations with Nicosia. Turkey is the only country to formally
    acknowledge the Turkish side of Cyprus as an independent state.

    The wording of these two EU documents will be crucial. Diplomats in
    Brussels say the EU's British presidency has struck a deal with France
    effectively removing the threat of a formal EU stipulation that the
    talks could lead to a `privileged partnership' rather than full
    membership.

    Rehn today sought to allay the latent anxiety many member states feel
    about the long-term consequences of Turkish membership. He noted that
    as all member states need to unanimously approve all of the 35
    chapters into which accession talks have been divided, opportunities
    to put a brake on the process abound.

    `The member states will have to approve unanimously all the documents
    [concerning] the negotiations on each and every chapter. That means
    that there will be 35 decisions to be taken concerning the opening of
    chapters and 35 decisions concerning the closing of chapters, and
    perhaps in 10 or 15 years' [time] a decision concerning the possible
    closing of negotiations. This means that after the opening of the
    negotiations has been decided there will be all together 71
    `veto-points' for each member state,' Rehn said.

    Rehn said some EU policy areas would remain closed for Turkey, while
    permanent safeguard measures would be put in place to block
    immigration from the country. Also, he said, Turkey would be subject
    to rigorous monitoring by the European Commission. The commission is
    issuing annual `progress reports,' the next of which is due on 9
    November.

    However, Cyprus remains a stumbling block. Turkey's overt repetition
    of the fact it does not recognize Cyprus continues to raise hackles in
    the EU. To add insult to injury, Turkey also refuses to implement the
    extended customs union with the EU when it comes to Cyprus. Its ports
    and airports remain closed to Cypriot boats and planes.

    The Cypriot government today warned it is ready to veto the start of
    accession talks with Turkey.

    Rehn sought to steer a cautious course. He said the issues with Cyprus
    do not have to be resolved before 3 October. He said Turkey would be
    forced to accept Cypriot transport or find itself unable to end talks
    on some chapters.

    Rehn said it is `evident' Turkey must recognize Cyprus by the time it
    accedes to the EU.

    But Rehn also sought to pressure Cyprus. He noted that it was the
    Greek part of Cyprus that voted down a UN compromise last year in a
    referendum. Had they not done so, Rehn noted, the problem of
    recognition would not exist today.

    He obliquely criticized Cyprus for single-handedly blocking an EU aid
    package to the Turkish part of Cyprus worth hundreds of millions of
    euros.

    `It is regrettable that those who have in fact suffered from the
    current situation are in the first place the Turkish Cypriot
    community, because regardless of our decisions more than a year ago,
    we have not been able to provide the package on financial assistance
    and direct trade, which would help in ending the economic isolation of
    the northern part of Cyprus and enhancing economic development and
    trade relations in that part of the island -- which is also necessary
    to facilitate a comprehensive settlement in Cyprus,' Rehn said.

    Currently, the EU views northern Cyprus as EU territory where EU laws
    are suspended.

    Responding to criticism voiced by some European Parliament deputies
    today, Rehn said the recent indictment in Turkey of the celebrated
    author Orhan Pamuk is `clearly in breach of the principles of the
    European Convention on Human Rights.'

    Pamuk was indicted earlier this month after he spoke of the `genocide'
    of Turkey's Armenian population during World War I. A prosecutor in
    Istanbul said his remarks amounted to a "public denigration" of
    Turkish identity.

    Rehn said the decision by an Istanbul district judge to set 16
    December as the trial date is a `provocation' -- as it was on that day
    last year that the EU summit decided to authorize accession talks with
    Turkey.


    http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2005/09/df40a84a-105a-41fd-a41f-f7d3f329d956.html
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