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Turkish PM Plans To Attend Mediterranean Summit: Aide

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  • Turkish PM Plans To Attend Mediterranean Summit: Aide

    TURKISH PM PLANS TO ATTEND MEDITERRANEAN SUMMIT: AIDE

    Agence France Presse -- English
    July 8, 2008 Tuesday 11:36 AM GMT

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is planning to attend a
    summit this weekend aimed at launching a Mediterranean union despite
    Turkish reservations about the French initiative, an aide said Tuesday.

    French President Nicolas Sarkozy telephoned Erdogan and personally
    invited him to Sunday's gathering in Paris.

    "The prime minister said he will attend unless something extraordinary
    happens," Erdogan's spokesman Akif Beki told AFP, without giving
    details.

    Ankara has been hesitating about whether to embrace the Union for
    the Mediterranean, an initiative spearheaded by Sarkozy, because of
    doubts that it may be an attempt to delude the country's European
    Union membership prospects.

    Sarkozy is a staunch opponent of Turkey's EU accession and advocates a
    "special partnership" rather than full membership -- a proposal Ankara
    categorically rejects.

    Turkish diplomats took part in a meeting last week to draft a final
    resolution to be adopted at Sunday's summit and secured "significant"
    changes in the text, Turkish Foreign Minister Ali Babacan said earlier
    Tuesday, without elaborating.

    "There are several more issues on which talks will continue," he said,
    adding that diplomats would meet again to put the final touches on
    the draft on the eve of the summit.

    Sarkozy has invited leaders from about 40 countries, including Arab
    nations and Israel, for the launch of the initiative, aimed at boosting
    cooperation between EU and Mediterranean rim states.

    "We are not jumping on this initiative, but at the same time we
    are making preparations and keeping in touch" with the organisers,
    a Turkish government official said, adding that other countries also
    had reservations about the project.

    Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi is the only leader so far to have snubbed
    the invitation. He strongly criticised the idea of a Mediterranean
    union last month, saying it threatened Arab and African unity efforts.

    France's vocal opposition to Turkey's EU accession and attempts to
    slow down its accession talks, coupled with pressure on Ankara to
    recognise the killings of Armenians during World War I as genocide,
    have cast a pall on bilaterel ties in recent years.

    Turkey has accused French leaders of exploiting Turkey's EU bid in
    domestic politics despite the fact that Paris gave its consent to
    the opening of membership talks with Ankara in 2005.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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