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EU ambassadors meet last minute to clear obstacles of Turkey talks

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  • EU ambassadors meet last minute to clear obstacles of Turkey talks

    EU ambassadors meet last minute to clear obstacles ahead of Turkey talks

    By CONSTANT BRAND
    .c The Associated Press


    BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) - EU ambassadors meet Thursday in an effort to
    overcome differences that threaten to derail the start of Turkey's
    formal EU membership negotiations - with opposition from Austria
    appearing to be the biggest obstacle.

    Only days before the scheduled start of talks in Luxembourg on Monday,
    new strains have increased tensions with Turkey.

    The European Parliament, frustrated over Turkey's refusal to recognize
    EU-member Cyprus, voted Wednesday to postpone a vote to ratify
    Turkey's customs union with the EU, a requirement of membership. The
    lawmakers also called on Ankara to recognize the 1915-1923 killings of
    Armenians as genocide, which Turkey vehemently denies.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan immediately dismissed the
    nonbinding European resolution on the extremely sensitive Armenian
    issue, saying, ``It does not matter whether they took such a decision
    or not. We will continue on our way,'' according to private CNN-Turk
    television.

    The membership talks will be a milestone for Europe and predominantly
    Muslim Turkey, which has been knocking on the EU's door since 1963. EU
    leaders agreed to open accession talks with Turkey last year.

    The ambassadors are working to overcome the final disagreements
    because the 25-member EU must agree unanimously on a negotiating
    mandate to present to Turkey at the talks. Failure would lead to a
    rupture in already tense relations between Ankara and Brussels.

    Austria says its people - and many others across the bloc - do not
    support full membership for Turkey and is demanding that Ankara be
    given the option of privileged partnership rather than full
    membership. Turkey has already rejected anything less than full
    membership talks.

    Austria is also linking the Turkey talks with its wish to see the EU
    do more to review Croatia's now-frozen efforts to join the
    bloc. Vienna argues that membership for its Balkan neighbor will help
    stabilize the region.

    The Croatia talks were frozen earlier this year after the EU said
    Zagreb was not fully cooperating with the U.N. war crimes tribunal in
    The Hague to hand over a top indicted war crimes suspect.

    Britain, which holds the rotating EU presidency, is loath to link
    Croatia's EU bid to talks with Ankara. But Croatian Prime Minister
    Ivo Sanader said he would be in Luxembourg on Sunday to meet with EU
    officials to try to restart the talks, which were frozen in March.

    Diplomats said emergency foreign ministers' talks would be organized
    on Sunday if ambassadors fail to sway Austria.

    Britain's Foreign Secretary Jack Straw pressed his EU counterparts
    Wednesday not to turn their backs on Turkey, and to allow full entry
    talks to begin on time.

    ``It would be a huge betrayal of the hopes and expectations of the
    Turkish people and of Prime Minister (Recep Tayyip) Erdogan's program
    of reform if, at this crucial time, we turned our back on Turkey,''
    Straw said.

    Turkey reiterated Wednesday that any shift from earlier promises on
    full EU membership negotiations would be unacceptable.

    Austrian Foreign Minister Ursula Plassnik said this week there was
    support in Europe for Vienna's demand that Turkey be given a special
    relationship rather than full membership.



    09/28/05 20:10 EDT
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