Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turks' Interest In EU Fades

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Turks' Interest In EU Fades

    TURKS' INTEREST IN EU FADES
    By Paul de Bendern

    Doha Time
    Gulf Times, Qatar
    Oct 4 2006

    ISTANBUL: The European Union information office in Istanbul has a
    fresh coat of paint, the furniture is new and a row of computers is
    on offer to tempt passers-by to discover more about the wealthy bloc
    that Turkey hopes to join.

    But the receptionist is staring at an empty room - a reflection of
    a big drop in Turkish support for membership.

    One recent opinion poll showed support for joining the EU had dropped
    as low as 43% compared with over 70% a year ago when Turkey began
    its long-delayed entry talks.

    "EU support has dropped very fast... because of EU messages that
    have been transmitted and interpreted as humiliating," said Huseyin
    Bagci, an expert in international relations at Ankara's Middle East
    Technical University.

    "Turks also see the EU taking concessions from Turkey without giving
    anything in return," he told Reuters.

    European Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn visited Turkey yesterday
    with a carrot-and-stick message underlining the benefits of the
    accession process, but also pressing Ankara to deliver on reforms
    and on Cyprus.

    But in a year a lot has changed in this large, relatively poor
    and overwhelmingly Muslim country. Europeans are also increasingly
    questioning whether they want Turkey in the Union.

    Turks, sensitive on national issues, feel offended by a stream of EU
    criticism on issues ranging from the role of the revered military to
    the massacres of Armenians in World War I.

    This has made it harder for the centre-right reformist AK Party
    government to push through controversial reforms, especially ahead
    of parliamentary elections due in 2007.

    The European Commission is threatening a setback in talks unless
    Turkey opens its ports and airports to vessels from EU member Cyprus,
    whose internationally recognised Greek Cypriot administration is not
    accepted by Ankara.

    Turkey, which must appease rising nationalism at home, says the EU
    must first honour pledges to end trade sanctions against breakaway
    Turkish Cypriots in northern Cyprus backed by Ankara.

    The European Parliament has also irked Turks by demanding Turkey
    accept 1.5mn Armenians died in a "genocide" allegedly committed by
    Ottoman forces in World War I. Ankara denies genocide, saying large
    numbers of both Christian Armenians and Muslim Turks died during a
    partisan conflict.

    French President Jacques Chirac said on Saturday Turkey would need
    to acknowledge the 1915 massacre to join the EU.

    EU diplomats and Turkish politicans say the ruling AK Party, which
    has roots in political Islam, knows it is falling short on reforms
    but is prioritising domestic issues as polls approach.

    "It's simple window-dressing. The government is trying to buy time
    as elections approach," said a senior EU diplomat in Ankara. "It's a
    strategy that is very risky as those opposed to Turkey in the EU will
    use it to stop the talks." Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan insists his
    government remains fully committed to carrying out reforms.

    The Turkish parliament is now debating a reform package but it
    falls short of EU demands on free speech and the rights of religious
    minorities. It also does not address Cyprus.

    Turks are also less focused on Europe as Turkey experiences an economic
    boom and enjoys political stability.

    "The EU is a Christian club, they don't want to accept Muslim Turks,"
    said Levent Hocheli, a 32-year-old manager of an electronics and
    music store in Istanbul's financial district. "In 20 years' time I
    still don't think we'll be members, but it's OK. We are growing fast
    economically." Many Turks doubt the European Commission will suspend
    membership talks. Turkey, which has Nato's second-largest army,
    is seen as helping to boost Europe's long-term security.

    "I've seen so many ups and downs in Turkey's quest for EU membership
    over the past 40 years. I've heard 10 times it's over," said Mehmet
    Ali Birand, a leading commentator.

    "The EU cannot suspend talks just over ports, that would be too much,
    it would be like using a nuclear bomb to find Osama bin Laden,"
    he said.
Working...
X