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Turkey Must Meet EU Demands Or Risk Halt Of Talks: EU Lawmakers

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  • Turkey Must Meet EU Demands Or Risk Halt Of Talks: EU Lawmakers

    TURKEY MUST MEET EU DEMANDS OR RISK HALT OF TALKS: EU LAWMAKERS

    Playfuls.com, Romania
    Aug 5 2006

    The European Union will put the brakes on accession talks with Turkey
    if the bloc's demands on faster reforms and normalization of ties
    with Cyprus are not met, a key European lawmaker said Tuesday.

    "We hope and expect that Turkey will do now what it failed to do
    in the last two years," said Camiel Eurlings, a Dutch conservative
    member of the EU Parliament whose report on Turkey was adopted late
    Monday by the assembly's foreign affairs committee.

    "Turkey must re-start reforms vigorously or otherwise risk a halt of
    negotiations," said Eurlings in remarks to Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa.

    Eurlings' report warns Turkey once again that current membership
    talks with Turkey are "open-ended" and that Ankara's entry into the
    25-nation club is by no means guaranteed.

    It says that as a condition for EU membership, Turkey must acknowledge
    the genocide against Armenians in World War I.

    It also slams Ankara on a deteriorating human rights record and
    slow reforms.

    "It is important that the reforms be given impetus from within the
    country by the authorities themselves and are not merely the result
    of pressure from outside Turkey," EU lawmakers stressed.

    Referring to growing public unease at the EU's eastward expansion,
    the report highlights that the bloc's "capacity to absorb Turkey while
    maintaining the momentum of integration is an important consideration."

    EU lawmakers in the past have never vetoed any accession bid.

    However, the parliament's biggest and most influential conservative
    group favours a so-called "privileged partnership" with Turkey.

    The report will be submmitted for vote to a plenary session of the
    European Parliament at the end of September.

    Parliamentarians' concerns are also likely to be raised when
    chief Turkish EU negotiator Ali Babacan meets with EU enlargement
    commissioner Olli Rehn on Wednesday.

    Rehn has warned of a "train crash" in Turkey's EU negotiations when
    he delivers a crucial progress report scheduled for October 24.

    The EU last week told Turkey that its continued refusal to open
    harbours and airports to ships and planes from EU member Cyprus could
    cause a crisis in the talks.

    The EU has often told Turkey that if it maintains the current ban on
    Cyprus, Ankara's EU membership negotiations regarding crucial single
    market issues could be derailed.

    Turkey began negotiations aimed at EU membership last year. Talks
    are expected to take up to 15 years.
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