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Poll Shows Public's Support For EU Waning In Turkey

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  • Poll Shows Public's Support For EU Waning In Turkey

    POLL SHOWS PUBLIC'S SUPPORT FOR EU WANING IN TURKEY
    Ethan Mcnern

    Scotsman, United Kingdom
    Oct 25 2006

    FEWER than a third of Turks think their country must enter the European
    Union, a poll showed yesterday, as Ankara comes under increasing
    pressure to make concessions before it can join.

    The survey, published in the newspaper Milliyet, showed 32.2 per cent
    thought Turkey "must certainly enter the EU", a sharp decline on the
    57.4 per cent figure last year and 67.5 per cent in 2004.

    The poll, which shows a more dramatic decline in EU support than
    other recent surveys, comes as Brussels is urging Turkey to step up
    reforms and make concessions over the divided island of Cyprus if it
    is to avoid a possible freeze in membership talks later this year.

    The survey may make it harder for Tayyip Erdogan, the prime minister,
    who faces elections next year, to push through unpopular measures
    demanded by the EU.

    Of the 2,408 people polled, 25.6 per cent said Turkey "should certainly
    not enter the EU" - only 10.3 per cent felt that way last year.

    The survey was carried out in late September, and since then
    nationalism and anti-EU feeling have been fuelled further by a law
    passed in the French parliament making it a crime to deny - as Ankara
    does - that Ottoman Turks carried out genocide against Armenians
    in 1915.

    The poll also showed that only 7.2 per cent trust the EU. Many Turks,
    including the government, complain that Brussels is changing the
    rules over Cyprus as it goes along.

    The EU is due to present a report on Turkey's progress on 8 November,
    which will probably criticise Ankara for a lack of reform on issues
    such as minority and religious rights and freedom of speech -
    prosecutors have continued to take journalists and writers to court
    over insulting "Turkishness".

    Meanwhile, Turkey still refuses to open its ports and airports to
    Greek Cypriot planes and vessels. Ankara supports a breakaway Cyprus
    in the north, refusing to recognise the EU-member Cypriot government
    in the south.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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