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ANKARA: EU's only Plan for Turkey is Membership

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  • ANKARA: EU's only Plan for Turkey is Membership

    Zaman, Turkey
    Oct 28 2006

    EU's only Plan for Turkey is Membership
    By Economy News Desk
    Saturday, October 28, 2006
    zaman.com


    Graham Watson, leader of the Group of the Alliance of Democrats and
    Liberals in the European Parliament (EP), is certain Turkey will
    become a member of the European Union.

    Watson said accession would ultimately take place but some circles
    had an unfavorable opinion about free circulation and noted the
    European Union had no Plan B for Turkey.

    Invited to Turkey by Zaman daily, Watson spoke at a meeting organized
    by the Confederation of Turkish Businessmen and Manufacturers
    (TUSKON).

    Watson focused on Turkey's E.U. process and said the European Union
    should keep enlarging and include countries that fulfill the criteria
    in order to continue the success it had so far obtained.

    `No matter how long it lasts, this reform process should be a peg to
    increase economic stability and life standards,' he said.

    Describing the supporters of Turkey's E.U. membership process as
    optimistic and those who oppose it as pessimistic, Watson believes
    the optimists try to turn difficulties into opportunities whereas the
    latter group refuses to take advantage of any opportunity.

    While there were vast opportunities for optimists, he said,
    pessimists remained reluctant in regards to politics, causing doors
    to shut in Turkey's membership process.

    There were still some difficulties for Turkey's membership process
    but the Turkish government was determined to do its best, he added.

    Calling for calmness in discussions on Cyprus, Watson said, `We
    should come through this storm because everything will ultimately
    settle down.'

    Stating France was influential on the UK's 10-year wait during the
    E.U. membership process, Watson believes the membership process
    should continue in agreement with the Copenhagen criteria. Confidence
    must be established without worrying over the increasing goals of
    politicians because getting public confidence is no easy task.

    Seven percent of the Turkey believes in the European Union, a
    newspaper survey revealed. Turkey should overcome these obstacles in
    the public opinion and struggle against those opposing enlargement,
    he said.

    Graham added that there were 12 E.U. members in 1980. Today, there
    are 27 countries because a single market offers great opportunities
    and the trade is an important tool in this sense.

    Terming the French parliament passing a bill on an Armenian genocide
    as `madness,' Watson said: `Such a law is totally absurd in today's
    world. If it becomes a law, they will regret it.'
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