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EU applying 'double standards' to Turkey: parliament speaker

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  • EU applying 'double standards' to Turkey: parliament speaker

    Agence France Presse -- English
    September 29, 2005 Thursday

    EU applying 'double standards' to Turkey: parliament speaker

    ANKARA


    The speaker of the Turkish parliament charged Thursday that "double
    standards" were being applied his country's long-standing membership
    bid in an attempt to provoke Ankara to walk away from the talks.

    "It seems as if our patience is being tested. Looking at what is
    being done to Turkey one sees that there are some quarters that hope
    to get rid of us by forcing us to walk away from the (negotiating)
    table," Bulent Arinc said in an interview with NTV television.

    "When one compares the treatment of Romania, Bulgaria or Malta to the
    different treatment accorded to Turkey one sees ... insincerity,
    double standards and discrimination," he added.

    Arinc was commenting on a resolution adopted by the European
    Parliament Wednesday which urged Ankara to acknowledge that the
    Ottomans committed "genocide" against Armenians during World War I
    and to recognize Cyprus during its accession negotiations with the
    EU.

    The resolution came only five days before Turkey is scheduled to
    begin membership talks with the pan-European bloc on Monday, but the
    start of the negotiations remains uncertain.

    EU foreign ministers are to meet Sunday to break a deadlock on
    opening the talks after Austria blocked agreement on a negotiation
    position by insisting that Turkey be offered something short of full
    membership.

    Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul has warned previously that he will turn
    his back on the talks if the negotiating framework contains "any
    formula or suggestion other than full membership."

    Arinc said: "It is hard to swallow all these... But we should be
    patient and I believe that we will overcome many obstacles once the
    process starts."

    The speaker stressed that he understood widespread doubts in the EU
    over the prospect of admitting a vast, populous country with a
    predominantly Muslim faith, but urged European leaders "to keep the
    debate away from prejudices and be objective."

    The European Parliament resolution unleashed anger in Turkey where
    discussion of the tragic killings in 1915-1917 largely remains taboo
    and triggers nationalist sentiments.

    "We would like to recall that discussing the issue (the Armenian
    massacres) in political platforms would benefit nobody," the Turkish
    foreign ministry said in a statement Thursday.

    "Turkey has always argued that controversial chapters in history
    should be handled by historians and has opened its archives to the
    service of all researchers," it added.

    Armenians claim that up to 1.5 million of their kinsmen were
    slaughtered in orchestrated killings under the Ottoman Empire, the
    forerunner of modern-day Turkey, but Ankara categorically denies that
    a genocide took place.
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