Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Ankara Speaks a Language of Threats to EU

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Ankara Speaks a Language of Threats to EU

    AZG Armenian Daily #175, 30/09/2005


    Turkey-EU

    ANKARA SPEAKS A LANGUAGE OF THREATS TO EU

    Turkish Delegation Will Not Leave for Luxemburg if the Phrase 'Privileged
    Partnership' Is Not Removed from Documents

    Speaking about European parliament's resolution, Turkish Prime Minister
    Tayyip Erdogan said: "This resolution is not mandatory. No matter what
    resolution they passed, we shall not renounce our stance". The International
    Herald Tribune referred yesterday sources standing close to PM Erdogan
    writing that the Parliament's resolution was in fact a sting for him despite
    PM's outwardly calm response. The paper says that Erdogan at first wanted to
    boycott the negotiations.

    The representatives of EU member states tried to set the format of Turkey-EU
    talks in Brussels yesterday. The EU ambassadors failed to come to a
    unanimous decision. Meanwhile Austria proposed the status of "privileged"
    partner, which Ankara rejected. Austria's chancellor Wolfgang Schlussel
    declared yesterday that his country will agree to start negotiations for
    Turkey's full membership if the EU reopens talks with Croatia halted because
    of Zagreb's refusal to hand a war criminal over to the Court of Hague.

    The Great Britain, which holds the EU presidency, confirmed yesterday that
    foreign ministers will meet on Sunday. In effect, the ministers will try to
    save EU-Turkey talks slated in Luxemburg, October 3.

    Abdullah Gul, Turkey's foreign minister, called his British counterpart
    earlier threatening that the Turkish delegation will not leave for Luxemburg
    unless final negotiation documents lay bare on the table. According to
    Hurriyet, the Turks will not leave for Luxemburg if EU does not remove
    "privileged partnership" wording from the documents and does not withhold
    Cyprus' right for veto on Turkey's participation in international meetings.

    The September 28 speeches at the European Parliament as well as opinion
    polls in different EU countries show that the Europeans are not inclined to
    accept Turkey as a full member of the European family. Most of the French,
    Germans and Austrians are against Turkey's membership and the Danes would
    prefer Ukraine to agricultural, Islamic Turkey. One of Greek deputies said
    in his speech: "It's inadmissible to make a positive decision hoping that
    Turkey will some day become a democratic country. Following that logic we
    can admit to EU countries like Iraq, Afghanistan, Cambodia, Iran and other
    undemocratic states".

    The International Herald Tribune writes that pessimism in Europe about
    Turkey will deepen in near future. In case Angela Merkel wins the elections
    in Germany her government will not go beyond "privileged partnership" with
    Turkey. Presidential candidate in France, Nikola Sarkozy, is also against
    Turkey's membership.

    By Tatoul Hakobian
Working...
X