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Greece On Turkey's EU Obligations

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  • Greece On Turkey's EU Obligations

    GREECE ON TURKEY'S EU OBLIGATIONS

    Athens News Agency, Greece
    Oct 12 2006

    Greece on Thursday reiterated that European Union hopeful Turkey must
    recognise EU member-state Cyprus as soon as possible.

    In a regular weekly press briefing, foreign ministry spokesman George
    Koumoutsakos referred to a paradox, as he said, in Turkey's quest for
    EU membership, namely, the fact that it continues to not recognise
    a country that is a member in an organisation it wants to join,
    something he termed "paradoxical and irrational".

    Conversely, the spokesman said the upcoming period will allow for
    opportunities to "lift this paradox".

    Asked about the screening of Turkey's ongoing EU accession process,
    Koumoutsakos said the chapter on "business and industrial policy" was
    discussed at a work group level within the EU recently, and that the
    Greek side had aired certain "substantive concerns" over technical
    issues. He added that the Cypriot side had expressed a negative
    opinion, leading to the tabling of relevant discussions for the future.

    Meanwhile, the foreign ministry spokesman declined to comment on
    the substance of a recent initiative by the Finnish EU presidency
    vis-?-vis the Cyprus issue and Turkey's stance, merely noting that
    the action aims to seek input by all interested sides. He also said
    that Athens has a standing position over the matter and does not wish
    to enter a reasoning of 'trade-offs'.

    Finally, Koumoutsakos was again asked about Wednesday's somewhat
    eyebrow-raising quip by his counterpart at the Turkish foreign
    ministry, Namik Tan, who reportedly responded to Koumoutsakos'
    allusion to the ubiquitous "train crash" metaphor - a leitmotif
    in press reports and European leaders' comments about EU-Turkey
    relations over the recent period - by saying that "Greece's specialty
    are airplane accidents. I would advice him (Koumoutsakos) to stick
    with those instead of train accidents".

    "I must tell you, because I know him, that Mr. Tan is a gentleman,
    and for this reason his statement surprised me," Koumoutsakos said,
    while declining to comment further. The spokesman's exact statement
    in Athens was: "Turkey will not derail if it follows the tracks..."

    In an ANA-MPA dispatch from Istanbul later on Thursday, Tan told an
    ANA-MPA correspondent that his comments were misinterpreted.

    "My statements had absolutely no intention of provoking or irritating,"
    he said, while adding that he has repeatedly in the past highlighted
    the positive side of Greek-Turkish relations and has made systematic
    efforts to clear-up possible misunderstandings between Athens and
    Ankara.

    Comment on French decision

    Meanwhile, in an unrelated development, Koumoutsakos was asked about
    Thursday's decision by the French National Assembly to pass a law
    making it a crime to deny that ethnic Armenians suffered genocide at
    the hands of Ottoman Turks during World War I.

    "It is well known that the Greek parliament adopted a 1996 resolution
    condemning the Armenian genocide. At the same time, we believe that
    in the modern world the past must not be an obstacle for the future."
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