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Ankara: French Senate Delivers Blow To Anti-Turkey Plan

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  • Ankara: French Senate Delivers Blow To Anti-Turkey Plan

    FRENCH SENATE DELIVERS BLOW TO ANTI-TURKEY PLAN
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    today's zaman, turkey
    june 12 2008

    The foreign affairs committee of the french senate yesterday cancelled
    a planned constitutional amendment that makes a referendum on the
    eventual accession of turkey to the european union compulsory and
    which has been described by ankara as product of "a discriminative
    approach" toward turkey by certain french politicians.

    late last month, the french national assembly, the lower house of
    the french parliament, passed a package of constitutional amendments
    including a provision to make a referendum obligatory for accepting
    new eu member countries with populations over 5 percent the bloc's
    total population, which currently stands at about 500 million. with
    its population of 70 million, eu candidate turkey appears to be the
    specific target of the clause.

    the provision needed to be approved first by the senate and a majority
    of both houses. yet a french senator had already said last week that
    a significant number of senators from the french ruling party were
    opposed to the amendment.

    while announcing cancellation of the planned amendment in a written
    statement, the foreign affairs committee said the amendment would
    deliver serious damage to france's bilateral relations with turkey.

    the amendment "might be considered as being against turkey, which
    is a friend and ally country, and thus might deal serious damage to
    diplomatic relations between france and turkey," the statement warned.

    The committee, discussing the amendment upon a proposal by its
    chairman, Josselin de Rohan, proposed that the amendment be deleted
    from the text. The committee decision, however, does not mean that
    it will be dropped entirely from the agenda of the French legislative
    body.

    During a plenary session debate on the constitutional reform planned
    to take place next week, a proposal for deleting the amendment
    will be introduced. If approved by the Senate, the amendment will
    be pulled out of the reform package without being discussed at the
    plenary session. Nonetheless, any member of the Senate can introduce
    a similar amendment and carry this amendment to a plenary session
    debate at the Senate.

    Sources from the Senate say the amendment's eventual fate is
    closely tied to the stance of Ã~Ilysée Palace as well as that of
    the government. Justice Minister Rachida Dati had supported the
    amendment when it was debated at the French National Assembly, while
    Prime Minister Francois Fillon was reportedly annoyed by it. Sources
    close to the government have added, however, that it was difficult
    for the government to object to an amendment supported by President
    Nicolas Sarkozy.

    Sarkozy, the former leader of the UMP, is a vocal opponent of
    Turkey's bid to join the EU, saying it does not belong to Europe. The
    constitutional reform package originally abolished a clause calling
    for a referendum on all future accessions to the EU and left the
    decision on the matter to the president. But UMP lawmakers, keen
    not to lose the vote of the French-Armenian electorate, pressed for
    guarantees against Turkey's possible accession to the EU and proposed
    the amendment in question.

    Jean-Pierre Raffarin, a senator from the ruling Union for a Popular
    Movement (UMP) and former prime minister of France, last week told
    French RCF radio that a constitutional provision specifically targeting
    a certain country was a mistake. "We have talked about this issue in
    our group. Many members of our group are against this amendment,"
    Raffarin said then. "A certain country cannot be pointed out in a
    national constitution."

    French State Secretary for European Affairs Jean-Pierre Jouyet has
    also warned that the plan to submit Turkey's bid to join the EU to
    a referendum is an "insult" that could spark a serious rift between
    Paris and Ankara.

    Also last week, the Turkish capital labeled French lawmakers' approval
    of the particular amendment as "odd," while warning Paris over the
    negative consequences of adoption of the clause by the French Senate on
    "traditional friendship between the peoples of the two countries."

    Turkey is annoyed by the "discriminative approach toward Turkey
    although accession negotiations between Turkey and the EU began with
    the common target of full membership and with approval of France too,"
    the Foreign Ministry said in a written statement. The statement by
    Foreign Ministry spokesperson Burak Ozugergin was issued in response
    to an official question.

    "It is inevitable that this kind of discriminative approach will
    harm our bilateral relations and will also have a negative impact
    on images of Turkey and France in each country as well as on the

    --Boundary_(ID_rA+sh2j/u/seXJObwwbCqw)--
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