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Croatia/Turkey: Accession Talks Run Into Early Political Difficultie

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  • Croatia/Turkey: Accession Talks Run Into Early Political Difficultie

    CROATIA/TURKEY: ACCESSION TALKS RUN INTO EARLY POLITICAL DIFFICULTIES

    European Report
    March 28, 2006

    Moves to open Croatia's and Turkey's EU membership negotiations on
    education and culture are being held up by French-led calls to put
    greater emphasis on the broader political entry criteria.

    The European Commission said on February 14 the two countries were
    ready to start talks on education and culture, but by 28 March member
    states were still to take the step of asking the Austrian EU Presidency
    to invite the candidates to submit their negotiating positions. The
    invitation has already been sent for science and research, paving
    the way for the start of membership negotiations proper.

    Sources say France - evidently cautious about further EU enlargement
    - supported by others including Cyprus and Greece, has called for
    a reference to be made in the Presidency's letter to the political
    membership criteria, which require aspiring EU members to achieve
    "stability of institutions guaranteeing democracy, the rule of law,
    human rights and respect for and protection of minorities".

    But some member states are against the move, saying the political
    criteria should not be mixed up in this way with detailed negotiations
    on the EU's acquis communautaire, or body of law. One view is that
    there would be other fora and other more appropriate 'chapters' of
    the talks to deal with political criteria, such as the chapter on
    'judiciary and fundamental rights'.

    Diplomats said one possible compromise might be to somehow reflect
    the French concerns in the cover note of the COREPER text asking the
    Presidency to send out the letter. The Committee of Member States'
    Permanent Representatives to the EU looked set to broach the matter
    on 29 March.

    The education and culture chapter was thought to be one of the 'easy'
    areas of the negotiations, given that it is primarily a matter
    of national competence. But one EU source explained that it had
    proved trickier than expected because it could touch on politically
    sensitive questions such as the teaching of history, the role of women,
    languages, minority rights or even the disputed Armenian genocide.

    While the concerns about the political criteria appear to revolve
    more around Turkey, Croatia is affected too because so far the two
    countries have been moving in parallel - even though Croatia would
    like to join by 2009 while many believe that Turkey's talks could
    last a decade or more.

    Hints of frustration have already begun to emerge from Zagreb. "With
    all due respect to Turkey, I think the moment will have to come real
    soon when Croatia will have to separate from Turkey", Croatia's Prime
    Minister Ivo Sanader said on 23 March. The accession process "could
    go faster in some segments but at this moment everything is perhaps
    a little too encumbered with political aspects", he added.

    EU sources say the Austrian Presidency is looking to schedule a
    deputy-level accession conference, prospectively in May, with a view
    to opening at least two chapters of the embryonic negotiations. That
    could be followed by a ministerial conference in June.
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