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Parliament Postpones Ratifying Turkey's Customs Union

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  • Parliament Postpones Ratifying Turkey's Customs Union

    PARLIAMENT POSTPONES RATIFYING TURKEY'S CUSTOMS UNION

    Cyprus Mail, Cyprus
    Sept 29 2005

    FRUSTRATED over Turkey's refusal to recognise Cyprus, the European
    Parliament yesterday postponed a vote to ratify Turkey's customs
    union with the EU, a requirement of Ankara's bid for membership in
    the 25-member bloc.

    Days before the scheduled start of EU membership talks, MEPs also
    called on Ankara to recognise the 1915-1923 killings of Armenians as
    a genocide, which Turkey vehemently denies.

    The Turkish lira and stock market lost ground on the events, although
    traders said they did not believe the October 3 opening of accession
    talks was at risk.

    The EU legislature has no say over the start or conduct of the talks
    but its assent is needed before Turkey can join, which is at least
    a decade away.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan immediately dismissed the
    non-binding European resolution on the killings of Armenians, 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.

    MEPs said in their resolution that recognition of the 1915-1923
    killings as genocide should be a prerequisite for Turkey to join the
    European Union.

    Armenians say that 1.5 million of their countrymen were killed by
    Ottoman Turks around the time of the First World War, which Armenians
    and several nations around the world recognise as the first genocide
    of the 20th century.

    Turkey denies that the massacres were genocide, saying the death toll
    is inflated and Armenians were killed in civil unrest as the Ottoman
    Empire collapsed.

    The EU Parliament voted 311-285 to postpone the customs union
    ratification vote at the request of conservative MEPs. There were
    63 abstentions.

    EU governments meanwhile remained deadlocked on the mandate for the
    talks, with Austria seeking a more explicit mention of an alternative
    to full membership.

    EU foreign ministers will have to hold an emergency meeting on Sunday
    in Luxembourg, hours before negotiations are to start, unless their
    ambassadors clinch a deal earlier in Brussels.

    The opening ceremony could slip to Monday evening because Turkish
    Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul will not board a plane until the
    EU ministers have formally endorsed a framework for negotiations,
    diplomats said.

    British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw, whose country holds the
    revolving EU presidency, said it would be "a huge betrayal of the
    hopes and expectations of the Turkish people and of Prime Minister
    Erdogan's programme of reform if, at the crucial time, we turned our
    back on Turkey".

    The EU legislature demanded that Turkey recognise EU member Cyprus
    soon and said negotiations could be suspended unless it granted access
    to Cypriot aircraft and shipping by next year.

    The vote by the parliament followed an emotional debate in which many
    deputies attacked Turkey's record on human rights, religious freedom
    and minorities, reflecting widespread public hostility to the poor,
    populous nation ever joining the bloc.

    Greens party leader Daniel Cohn-Bendit caused an uproar by accusing
    some right-wing critics of Turkey of "surfing on a wave of racism".

    The ballot's delay will have no effect on the starting date for
    Turkey's accession negotiations, scheduled for October 3. The
    assembly had already postponed its vote earlier this month, when
    the parliament's foreign affairs committee argued the customs union
    would not work unless Turkey agreed to allow Cyprus to use its ports
    or airports.

    In July, Turkey signed an agreement to widen the customs union with
    the EU to include Cyprus and nine other new EU members. But Ankara
    said this did not amount to recognition of Cyprus.

    EU governments issued a counter-declaration last week, warning that
    failure to recognise Cyprus could paralyse Turkey's EU entry talks.

    European People's Party chairman Hans-Gert Poettering said Turkey's
    position was "logically and politically unacceptable." "We want ... a
    statement from Turkey saying non-recognition of Cyprus will not be
    part of the ratification process (in the Turkish parliament)," he said.

    "We haven't received such a statement." EU expansion chief Olli Rehn
    said he regrets the parliament's decision to postpone.

    During the assembly's debate, Martin Schulz, chairman the Socialists
    in the Parliament, accused the conservatives of not wanting Turkey
    in the EU.

    "It would be better for you to say clearly: We don't want Turkey in
    the EU. You're skirting the message," Schulz said.

    In their resolution, MEPs also voiced concern about criminal
    proceedings against Turkish author Orhan Pamuk, who was charged with
    insulting the country's national character after making comments on
    Turkey's killing of Armenians and Kurds. He could face up to three
    years in prison.

    Some EU countries, including Germany, homeland of many of the MEPs
    who sought postponement, advocate the idea of a privileged partnership
    for Turkey rather than full membership.

    A new draft text outlining negotiating guidelines for Turkey's entry
    talks had still not been finalised due to strong objections by Austria.

    Vienna is also demanding the EU offer Turkey a privileged
    partnership. An Austrian diplomat said Vienna's demand has yet to be
    met. All 25 nations must agree on the EU's position before talks begin.

    But Ankara reacted sharply, saying any deviation from full membership
    would be unacceptable.
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