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Nicosia: Let October 3 be a great day for Turkey

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  • Nicosia: Let October 3 be a great day for Turkey

    Cyprus Mail
    Sept 30 2005

    Let October 3 be a great day for Turkey

    TURKEY should have been celebrating October 3 as one of the
    milestones in its history - after decades in the waiting, at last the
    start of full accession talks with the European Union.
    No country that has ever started accession talks has failed to join
    the EU. But the growing opposition to Ankara's membership across the
    continent suggests Turkey could well be the first to break the mould.


    As Monday's rendez-vous nears, the debate gets more strident by the
    hour. Indeed, there is still no agreement on the negotiating
    framework, without which talks cannot begin, with Austria holding out
    for an explicit alternative to full membership to be written in.
    Turkey has said it will walk away from talks if such a clause is
    inserted.

    The realisation that Turkey's membership prospects are now for real
    has suddenly reminded politicians across Europe of Turkey's many
    democratic shortcomings. People who'd barely heard about Cyprus are
    now championing its cause; the European Parliament is suddenly
    insisting that Turkey cannot join without acknowledging the Armenian
    genocide; many point to the ill-treatment of religious minorities or
    the charges laid against novelist Orhan Pamuk for comments on the
    massacres of Armenians and Kurds.

    They're right of course. The `deep state' is far from dead in Turkey,
    for all the reforms of the past years, and the country still offers
    its critics plenty of sticks with which to beat it. Turkey does
    little to help itself with its blustering arrogance, and the
    aggressive rhetoric it feels it has to offer its domestic audience to
    offset the compromises it is making.

    But is it helping anyone to raise all these issues at this stage and
    start talks in such a negative climate? Turkey's accession process is
    a win-win for all. The kind of changes Ankara will have to undertake
    will address precisely the kind of problems that so many are now
    nagging about. This can only be a good thing, anchoring a potentially
    unstable country in an institutional and economic framework that over
    a decade will erode precisely those fears that many harbour about
    Turkey.

    If at the end of that process, the Austrian people - or whoever else
    - are still implacably opposed to accession, then they will say no,
    period. That's when we can start thinking about special partnerships
    and the like - and to have reached that stage, Turkey will in any
    case have matured sufficiently not to slam the door and precipitate a
    regional crisis.

    So let Turkey enjoy its historic moment on Monday, and let's have the
    opportunity over the next decade, step by step, to try and bring the
    country into the orbit of democratic values that the European Union
    represents.
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