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Turkey At Turning Point Ahead Of EU Talks

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  • Turkey At Turning Point Ahead Of EU Talks

    TURKEY AT TURNING POINT AHEAD OF EU TALKS
    Christopher Wade | Ankara, Turkey

    Mail & Guardian Online, South Africa
    Sept 28 2005

    Last minute-wrangling aside, Turkey's long-awaited accession talks
    with the European Union are to finally get under way on October 3
    marking a major victory for the Ankara government and the beginning
    of one of the country's biggest diplomatic endeavours.

    "This is an historic turning point ahead of Turkey," Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan told the nation in a televised address during
    the week. "October 3 will be a new and unforgettable date."

    Turks won't be waking up to find their country radically changed on
    October 3 but Erdogan is right to call it a "turning point".

    Turkey became an associate member of the EU in 1963 and formally
    applied to become a member in 1987. It took another 12 years however
    before the EU brought itself to actually recognise Turkey as a
    candidate.

    Now, more than 40 years after Turkey first signalled its intentions
    to join the bloc, the negotiations are finally about to start.

    To say that Turkey has changed significantly since it was accepted
    as a candidate in 1999 is an understatement.

    In just six years the country has undergone a revolution in human
    rights thanks to its efforts to conform with the political criteria
    laid down by the EU.

    The death penalty has been lifted, Kurdish language classes are
    allowed, torture in custody has dropped considerably, women's rights
    have been strengthened, notoriously strict press laws have been
    relaxed and a completely new criminal code introduced.

    These reforms are impressive when one considers that Turks are
    predominantly conservative, religious and have a high level of respect
    for the state.

    Even more surprising has been the way that the reforms have been
    pushed through by Erdogan's Justice and Development Party (AKP),
    a party with its roots in moderate Islam who just a few years before
    preferred Turkey to look to the east and its Muslim neighbours.

    Before coming to power in 2002, the AKP wasn't expected to be so keen
    on "European values", but a realisation that the rights of religious
    conservatives could be easier guaranteed inside the EU led to a
    dramatic turnaround.

    With the strictly pro-secular military and establishment looking on
    warily, Erdogan has largely avoided issues close to his supporters --
    such as lifting a ban on the wearing of headscarves at universities
    or by public officials -- instead choosing to focus on the reforms
    needed to get the EU on side.

    Despite the significant progress, officials on both sides acknowledge
    that the reforms still have some way to go.

    Detainees are still tortured in custody, police still resort to
    their batons almost immediately when faced with an illegal protest
    and opinions out of line with "official thinking" can still land you
    with fines or a prison sentence.

    Turkey's most famous author, Orhan Pamuk, has been charged over
    comments made about the deeply contentious World War I-era Armenian
    genocide.

    "A million Armenians were killed in these lands and nobody but me
    dares talk about it," Pamuk told a Swedish magazine. The author has
    been charged with "denigrating the Turkish identity" and faces up to
    three years jail if found guilty.

    However change is evident even on the Armenian genocide issue.

    Turkey denies that mass killings of Armenians in the then Ottoman
    Empire during and after World War I constitute a "genocide" and has
    bitterly contested any such allegations.

    However just a week before the beginning of EU accession talks a
    conference was held in Ankara at which such allegations were aired;
    something that analysts say would have been impossible only a short
    time ago.

    Despite last minute legal hitches the conference went ahead with the
    blessing of the government. Turkey has realised that open discussion
    of even the darkest parts of its own history is not as destructive
    as feared.

    "At the conference they said 'genocide'. The world is still turning.

    Turkey still exists," the liberal Radikal newspaper said after the
    conference.

    Analysts say October 3 marks yet another milestone in Turkey's mission
    to be fully accepted by the West. However it could be 25 years before
    the country is ready to join the 25-member bloc.

    In the meantime there will be many hiccups and no doubt a few crises
    over issues as diverse as Turkey's non-recognition of the Republic
    of Cyprus, to the first time that a factory will have to be closed
    due to stringent EU pollution laws.

    "In the end it is the process that is important to Turkey," said one
    government official.

    "We are implementing these reforms both to comply with the EU and
    for ourselves. Who knows, perhaps in 15 years, when we are ready the
    Turkish people won't want to join."

    "Who knows what the EU will be like in 15 years?"

    Turkey's 40-year struggle Turkey first applied in 1959 for membership
    in the European Economic Community, as the EU was then known. The
    following is a chronology of developments:

    1959: Turkey makes its first application to join the European Union

    1963: Europeans respond to the request by proposing -- and signing --
    an Association Agreement with Ankara

    1970: Signature of an Additional Protocol to the Ankara pact focusing
    on a timetable for eliminating tariffs and quotas on goods traded by
    the two sides

    1980: Temporary freeze in relations because of Turkish military
    government

    1983: Restoration of relations following multi-party elections

    1987: Turkey applies for full membership

    1990: The European Commission and the European Council confirm Turkey's
    eligibility for membership

    1995: Establishment of a customs union between Turkey and the EU

    1999: Turkey is officially recognised by the European Council as a
    candidate state

    2003: The European Council adopts a revised Accession Partnership
    for Turkey, focusing on preparations for membership

    2004: The European Council defines the perspective for opening talks,
    sets October 3, 2005 date for start of negotiations

    June 2005: European Commission sets out negotiating mandate for the
    October 3 talks

    September 2005: EU governments agree a unilateral declaration on
    Turkish-Cyprus relations and adopt negotiating framework - Sapa-DPA
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