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ANKARA: Turkey's Existence Not Dependent On EU Entry, Says Babacan

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  • ANKARA: Turkey's Existence Not Dependent On EU Entry, Says Babacan

    TURKEY'S EXISTENCE NOT DEPENDENT ON EU ENTRY, SAYS BABACAN

    Today's Zaman
    Dec 5 2008
    Turkey

    In the face of rising criticism from Brussels over the Turkish
    government's apparent lack of ambition for reform, Foreign Minister
    Ali Babacan has suggested that the issue of EU membership was not a
    matter critical to the existence of EU candidate Turkey.

    Most recently, during a debate on a draft report on Turkey, the
    European Parliament on Tuesday stated that it was impossible for the
    ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government to keep its
    promise to modernize the country -- a promise it voiced after being
    elected for the second time in July 2007 with 47 percent of the vote,
    without making further political reforms.

    The draft report debated by the European Parliament's Committee on
    Foreign Affairs is full of serious warnings for Ankara, which the
    draft says has lost its ambition for political reform.

    Babacan, who attended a meeting of foreign ministers of NATO member
    countries in Brussels, spoke in an interview with the STV news channel
    on Wednesday night.

    Ups and downs along the EU membership process stem from the issue's
    nature and are normal, Babacan said. The government aims to raise
    the standard of living for the Turkish people through reforms, said
    Babacan, who is also the country's chief EU negotiator.

    However, "we do not have any issue of belonging. We are not a country
    which can only maintain its existence by joining a group or becoming
    a member [of a group]. Turkey is already a very important country on
    its own with its history and culture," Babacan was quoted as saying
    in the interview by the Anatolia news agency.

    Turkey, which began entry talks in 2005 but has seen its accession
    bid flag because of slow progress on reforms, often argues that the
    EU would be short-sighted if it rejected a moderate Muslim country
    key to its energy security and foreign policy ambitions.

    In its draft report, the European Parliament praised Turkey for
    its foreign policy, in particular its rapprochement with Armenia,
    but stepped up calls to improve human rights, reform the judiciary
    and curb the power of the military.

    Turkey, a NATO member, has in recent years boosted diplomatic and
    commercial ties with Central Asia, Iran, Russia, the Caucasus and
    the Middle East. In October, it won a nonpermanent seat on the UN
    Security Council.

    With few natural resources of its own, Turkey has positioned itself
    as a hub for the transport of Caspian and Central Asian oil and gas
    exports to Western markets.

    When a separate report by the executive European Commission last
    month rapped Turkey for slow progress, Ankara hit back, saying the
    EU's status as a global power was at stake if Turkey was left out. It
    also said Ankara was committed to full membership and that it would
    push ahead with reforms.

    Babacan was also reminded during the interview that Turkish leaders
    have been paying fewer visits to Brussels in recent years.

    In response, the minister suggested that frequent visits from Ankara
    to Brussels took place on the eve of the EU's December 2004 summit,
    when EU leaders said the membership negotiations with Turkey should
    begin in October 2005.

    During that period, candidate countries were also invited to
    EU summits, but such invitations have not since been extended to
    candidate countries, Babacan said. He added, however, that Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan was planning to pay an official visit
    to Brussels in the near future, while President Abdullah Gul also
    had plans to visit Brussels.

    Both Gul and Erdogan have lent support to the country's EU membership
    process, Babacan said, when reminded that the European Commission's
    report praised Gul for his role in domestic and foreign policy,
    while it criticized the government led by Erdogan.

    ---------------------------------------- ----------------------------------------

    Babacan has bilateral talks with Armenian, Azeri ministers in Helsinki
    Foreign Minister Ali Babacan had separate talks yesterday with his
    Armenian and Azerbaijani counterparts in Helsinki, on the sidelines of
    a meeting of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe
    (OSCE).

    No statement was released following the talks, the Anatolia news
    agency reported. On Wednesday, Armenian Foreign Minister Edward
    Nalbandian and Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov met with
    representatives from Russia, France and the United States, co-leaders
    of the OSCE's Minsk Group, working for a peaceful settlement of the
    Nagorno-Karabakh dispute. Anatolia said Babacan assessed the results
    of Wednesday's meeting during talks with Nalbandian and Mammadyarov.

    In September, on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York,
    Babacan, Nalbandian and Mammadyarov had three-way talks to discuss
    the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute.

    Earlier this week, during an official visit to Baku, Babacan said
    resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict will have a positive
    impact on Armenian-Turkish relations, describing the conflict as a
    problem not only for Azerbaijan but also for Turkey and the entire
    region. Ankara Today's Zaman with wires
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