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Turkey Assails EU's Decision To Partially Suspend Entry Talks

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  • Turkey Assails EU's Decision To Partially Suspend Entry Talks

    TURKEY ASSAILS EU'S DECISION TO PARTIALLY SUSPEND ENTRY TALKS
    By Katrin Bennhold

    International Herald Tribune, France
    Dec 12 2006

    BRUSSELS: Turkey reacted angrily Tuesday to a decision by the European
    Union to impose a partial freeze on membership talks and said relations
    were going through a difficult test.

    The decision on Turkey set the scene for a European summit meeting
    Thursday where EU enlargement will figure prominently. The next phase
    of expansion takes place Jan. 1, with the entry of Romania and Bulgaria
    increasing the size of the bloc to 27 members.

    EU foreign ministers agreed Monday to punish Turkey for refusing to
    open its ports and airports to Cyprus, an EU member. They suspended
    talks on 8 of the 35 issues under negotiation ahead of the possible
    accession of the mainly Muslim country more than a decade from now.

    The decision is expected to be endorsed by EU leaders at their summit
    talks on Thursday.

    "This decision is unfair to Turkey," Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan said in a televised speech. "Let us not forget that our
    friends in the EU also have promises they have not fulfilled."

    He said that relations between Turkey and the EU were "going through
    a serious test, despite all our efforts."

    Turks are bitter that they are being punished for not trading with
    Cyprus at a time when the EU has not fulfilled a two-year-old pledge
    to end a trade embargo on the Turkish Cypriot north of the island.

    They point out that Turkish Cyriots backed a United Nations plan to
    unify the island in 2004, while Greek Cypriots in the south rejected
    it. But the Greek part of the island still became a member of the EU
    and now has veto power over Turkish accession.

    Egeman Bagis, Erdogan's chief foreign policy adviser, said the
    Cyprus dispute was being used as a smokescreen in the debate
    over whether Turkey should join the EU. "Some countries in the EU
    unfortunately want to keep it as a Christian club," he said in a
    telephone interview. "Some countries are using Cyprus - and Cyprus
    is happy to be used."

    The focus on Cyprus was also criticized from a different direction.

    "The Cyprus issue has distracted from the fundamental issues,"
    said Joost Lagendijk of the Netherlands, chairman of the EU's Joint
    Parliamentary Committee with Turkey.

    "Human rights, minority rights, women's rights, freedom of speech -
    those are the issues that go to the heart of Turkey's compatibility
    with the European Union," he said.

    A report by the European Commission last month that criticized Turkey's
    refusal to trade with Cyprus also faulted Ankara for backsliding on
    many promised reforms. Turkey's limitation of the rights of Kurds and
    other minorities was sharply condemned, as were continuing reports
    of cases of torture and limits on freedom of expression.

    Erdogan's government has still not scrapped Article 301 of the
    penal code, which has allowed the prosecution of Turkish writers and
    academics for insulting "Turkishness." A writer, Ipek Calislar, and
    a publisher, Fatih Tas, are scheduled to be tried under the measure
    next week.

    The fact that the EU's decision Monday did not mention human rights
    violations was criticized by an Armenian lobby group. "The silence of
    the member countries on other Turkish violations are a lapse that
    seriously endangers European integration," a statement from the
    European Armenian Federation for Justice and Democracy said.

    Naif Bezwan, a Kurdish researcher at Osnabruck University in Germany,
    said: "Of course it's unacceptable that Turkey does not recognize
    a member of the very Union it wants to join, but when it comes to
    Turkey's compatibility with the EU the main issue is how Turkey deals
    with religious and national minorities."

    Lagendijk said he hoped that a pledge Monday by EU foreign ministers
    to seek an end to the economic isolation of the Turkish part of Cyprus
    over the next six months would refocus the negotiations on economic
    and political reforms.

    "You would hardly find anyone in Turkey siding with the EU on Cyprus,"
    he said, "but you'll find a lot of people calling for our support on
    human rights and political reforms."

    Erdogan on Tuesday vowed to press ahead with reforms.

    "Our reform process will continue with the same decisiveness," he said.

    But Bagis, his adviser, said some damage had already been done. Ahead
    of presidential and legislative elections in Turkey next year, the
    mood has turned more nationalistic, and the EU's demand on Cyprus is
    one reason why support for EU membership has fallen sharply over the
    last two years, analysts say.
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