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ANKARA: Cyprus Clauses In EU Report Disappointing, Mercan Says

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  • ANKARA: Cyprus Clauses In EU Report Disappointing, Mercan Says

    CYPRUS CLAUSES IN EU REPORT DISAPPOINTING, MERCAN SAYS
    Fulya Ozerkan

    Turkish Daily News
    Oct 1 2006

    Cyprus-related provisions of the document refrain from recalling
    Turkey's steps for a settlement of the decades-old dispute and echo top
    EU officials urging Ankara to normalize its relations with EU-member
    Greek Cyprus and allow in its ships and airplanes

    Cyprus clauses in the strongly worded European Parliament document
    on Turkey's progress toward eventual European Union membership seem
    to be in the shadow of calls from European parliamentarians and EU
    officials urging Ankara to reinvigorate the reform process.

    In a non-binding report adopted last week, the European Parliament
    chided Turkey for its failure to meet EU requirements and demanded
    that Ankara fulfill its obligation to open up its sea and air ports
    to Greek Cypriot vessels and planes under a customs union protocol.

    "I was disappointed mostly by Cyprus passages in the report," a senior
    ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) deputy, Murat Mercan,
    told the Turkish Daily News.

    "It could have been more balanced," he added.

    Cyprus-related provisions of the document refrain from recalling
    Turkey's steps for a settlement of the decades-old dispute and echo top
    EU officials urging Ankara to normalize its relations with EU-member
    Greek Cyprus and allow in its ships and airplanes.

    Turkey, however, says it will maintain its stance unless the 25-nation
    bloc makes good on a pledge to end the economic isolation of northern
    Cyprus. Brussels rejects any linkage between the ports issue and the
    lifting of sanctions on Turkish Cypriots and has warned Turkey that
    failure to fulfill its obligations could cause a setback in its EU
    accession negotiations, which opened last October.

    Similarly, the European Parliament's report warned that the "lack
    of progress in this regard will have serious implications for the
    negotiation process and could even bring it to a halt.

    "I would expect the report to encompass more encouraging clauses that
    acknowledge Turkish steps on Cyprus," Mercan added.

    Greek Cypriots, however, welcomed the European Parliament's Turkey
    report, with the Greek Cypriot press describing the document as a
    "slap [in the face] for Ankara."

    Pros and cons:

    European parliamentarians mostly focused on reform pace in their
    report, warning Ankara that it must accelerate far-reaching reforms
    if it wanted to become a member of the EU.

    They also noted Turkey had shown "insufficient progress" in the
    areas of freedom of expression, religious and minority rights,
    women's rights and the rule of law since the opening of entry talks.

    The report's author, Dutch parliamentarian Camiel Eurlings, who
    admitted that the report was "tough" but "fair," urged Ankara to see
    it as a "motivation to speed up reforms."

    But despite the presence of controversial articles, European
    parliamentarians voted certain clauses favorable to Ankara, which
    expressed dissatisfaction with the report but appreciated European
    parliamentarians' efforts to prevent further damages to Turkish-EU
    ties.

    "This report is more positive than another document adopted by the
    European Parliament in 2005," said Mercan, who was one of the Turkish
    lawmakers lobbying European parliamentarians in Brussels and Strasbourg
    in a bid to change the critical report, which was tougher when it was
    first adopted at the European Parliament's Foreign Affairs Committee
    earlier last month.

    He cited an emphasis on market economy, condemnation of terrorism
    by the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) and extending of
    solidarity with Turkey in the fight against terrorism as positive
    elements in the European Parliament document.

    To the content of Ankara, the European Parliament deleted a
    controversial clause that would have sought to make recognition by
    Turkey of an alleged genocide of Armenians at the hands of the late
    Ottoman Empire a pre-condition for full membership.

    But the report still called on Turkey to "acknowledge the Armenian
    genocide" before it can join the EU, with European parliamentarians
    saying it was "indispensable" for Turkey to "come to terms with and
    recognize its past."

    Ankara is now awaiting a progress report from the EU's executive arm,
    the commission. EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn is to travel
    to Turkey on Monday before the release of the key report.

    Parliament has been considering an EU-inspired reform package designed
    to meet EU requirements, and Rehn earlier said he expected legal
    changes to be approved in October. Last-minute legal reforms could
    help Turkey's case in the progress report on reforms but EU officials
    have said they will wait and see if the contents include real progress
    on key issues.
    From: Baghdasarian
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