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France risks EU row over human rights in Turkey

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  • France risks EU row over human rights in Turkey

    France risks EU row over human rights in Turkey
    By Daniel Dombey in Brussels and Vincent Boland in Ankara

    FT
    March 22 2006 16:31

    France is pushing the European Union to take a tougher line on human
    rights in accession negotiations with Turkey in a move the European
    Commission fears will damage relations with Ankara.


    EU leaders are also facing calls from Paris to thrash out a new, more
    rigorous strategy for enlargement ` an issue that foreign ministers
    will discuss at a summit on Thursday night.

    Some members of Germany's ruling Christian Democrats also back the
    plan, saying the EU would only be able to admit big new member states
    to the 25-nation bloc after major institutional reform, such as that
    envisaged in the proposed constitution rejected by French and Dutch
    voters last year. Angela Merkel, German chancellor, recently
    downplayed the hopes of western Balkan countries of full EU
    membership.

    The French initiatives deepen the Commission's concerns that Paris and
    its allies are seeking to frustrate Turkey's bid for membership a mere
    six months after the EU agreed to begin the accession process.

    `Some member states want to introduce new goal posts in a
    non-transparent manner,' said a senior Commission official. `This may
    backfire because it is not considered in Turkey that we are playing a
    fair game.'

    Paris insists it is acting in good faith and does not seek to obstruct
    the negotiations. It adds that worries about enlargement played a
    large role in the French public's rejection of the European
    constitution in a referendum last year and that leaders need to
    consider seriously the limits of the EU's capacity to absorb new
    members.

    `This is not a question of stopping enlargement,' said a senior French
    diplomat. `This is a question of showing that someone is flying the
    plane.'

    The first French push is to link negotiations on education and culture
    ` normally one of the least contentious parts of enlargement talks `
    to human rights criteria.

    Paris says the education and culture `chapter' has to take account of
    human rights issues, such as Turkish textbooks that treat minorities
    as untrustworthy.

    The Commission and countries such as the UK respond that it is unfair
    to add new conditions to negotiations that have traditionally focused
    a state's record in adopting EU laws.

    Although the EU's 25 member states have agreed to start another
    chapter ` on science and technology ` no negotiations have started,
    because the current Austrian presidency of the EU would like to begin
    talks on both chapters at the same time.

    But the larger issue is whether the question of human rights will
    overshadow almost all of Turkey's negotiations with the EU, instead of
    mainly being dealt with in chapters on fundamental rights and justice
    and home affairs.

    An opinion poll last week showed that support in Turkey for EU
    membership is slipping. Although some 66 per cent of Turks still
    support entry, the trend is downwards, as it has been almost since
    Turkey secured its negotiations last October.
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