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ANKARA: Greek Cypriot deputy wants another ice-breaking match

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  • ANKARA: Greek Cypriot deputy wants another ice-breaking match

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Nov 29 2008


    Greek Cypriot deputy wants another ice-breaking match


    European Parliament member Marios Matsakis holds up coins during an
    address at the Turkey-EU Joint Parliamentary Committee meeting in
    Ankara.

    Turkey should consider soccer diplomacy with Greek Cyprus as it could
    help restore ties between Ankara and the Greek Cypriot government,
    which it does not recognize, a European parliamentarian said
    yesterday.


    President Abdullah Gül broke a Turkish foreign policy taboo by
    visiting Armenia to watch a soccer game in early September between the
    national soccer teams of the two countries in the World Cup. The visit
    paved the way for contacts between Turkey and Armenia, who have had no
    formal ties since 1993.

    Marios Matsakis, a Greek Cypriot member of the European Parliament
    (EP) visiting Turkey to attend a meeting of members of the Turkish and
    the EP in Ankara, said he conveyed his proposal to PM ErdoÄ?an
    during their talks this week.

    "It seems the soccer game between Turkey and Armenia worked. Perhaps
    Turkey can play a game with us and everything will be fine," Matsakis
    said during a session of the EU-Turkey Joint Parliamentary Committee
    on Friday.

    Although the soccer diplomacy appears to have helped ties between
    Armenia and Turkey, relations with Greek Cyprus are far more
    complicated. Turkey does not recognize the Greek Cypriot
    administration, which is internationally recognized as representing
    the whole island. Turkey, on the other hand, is the sole country that
    recognizes the Turkish Cypriot state controlling the north of
    Cyprus. Cyprus' lingering division causes problems in Turkey's EU
    aspirations, with Greek Cyprus using its voting rights as an EU member
    to force Turkey to make concessions on the Cyprus issue.

    Turkish and Greek Cypriot leaders have been holding direct talks on
    reunification of the island but Turkish Cypriot leader Mehmet Ali
    Talat complains the Greek Cypriot side has been taking very slow
    steps, preventing any significant progress in the talks. Matsakis said
    at the meeting that Turkey should stay away from the talks to let the
    two sides reach an agreement.

    Gül's historic visit to Yerevan widely won praise from Europe
    and liberals at home but opposition parties remain skeptical about
    restoring ties with a country that still keeps a chunk of regional
    ally Azerbaijan's territory under occupation over a dispute over
    Nagorno-Karabakh and supports the Armenian diaspora's efforts to win
    international recognition for Armenian genocide claims.

    "Future generations will see this as a naïve attempt if efforts
    fail this time again," Onur Ã-ymen, a senior member of the main
    opposition Republican People's Party (CHP), said at the same
    parliamentary gathering. He said Turkey had undertaken similar
    initiatives in the direction of normalizing relations with Armenia in
    the past but that they all failed because of a lack of response from
    Yerevan.

    Ã-ymen, whose party is a strong critic of the EU and many of the
    reforms pushed forward by the government, also expressed skepticism
    about the European involvement in the process. "Our European friends
    should be moderate in their comments and praises and should refrain
    from applauding every step [the government takes]," he said of the
    European statements welcoming Gül's visit and the
    Turkish-Armenian rapprochement that followed.

    Joost Lagendijk, a firm supporter of Turkey's accession to the EU who
    also co-chairs the EU-Turkey Joint Parliamentary Committee, responded
    to Ã-ymen's criticism saying it was Turkey, not the EU, that sent
    Gül to Yerevan. But Ã-ymen was not convinced, saying the
    process started under pressure from the EU and the United States.

    Ergenekon controversy

    Ties with Armenia were not the only issue of contention between
    Lagendijk and Ã-ymen. On Thursday, during another gathering of the
    EU-Turkey Joint Parliamentary Committee, the two disagreed on the
    Ergenekon case and press freedom in Turkey. Ã-ymen criticized the
    European delegation for not complaining about a recent step by the
    Prime Ministry to cancel the authorization of a group of journalists
    to work inside the Prime Ministry building. This, he claimed, shows
    freedom of the press was not at all important for the EU.

    Lagendijk, on the other hand, said he did not defend the restrictions
    imposed by the Prime Ministry since they resemble and in a way justify
    a deep-rooted policy of the General Staff to not accredit several
    newspapers and television stations which it considers anti-secularist.

    The Prime Ministry recently revoked the accreditation of a group of
    journalists on the grounds of false reporting. A Turkish daily said
    the European parliamentarians raised the issue during a meeting with
    Prime Minister ErdoÄ?an this week but both the European
    delegation and the Prime Ministry denied the report.

    On Ergenekon, a network of military and civilian officials and
    criminal elements that is suspected of plotting against the
    government, Ã-ymen was also unhappy about the European backing for
    the legal action against the group. "How can you take sides so openly?
    There are different views on this. ¦ Please don't take sides
    because tomorrow you may feel ashamed," he told Lagendijk, a frequent
    visitor to the courthouse where the Ergenekon hearings are being held.

    Lagendijk admitted that the issue was complicated, but noted that CHP
    leader Deniz Baykal had declared himself an "attorney" for the
    defendants long before the court proceedings began.

    The meeting was the last gathering of the EU-Turkey Parliamentary
    Committee in Turkey with Lagendijk participating. The Dutch
    parliamentarian, married to a Turkish journalist and reportedly
    planning to settle in Turkey, has announced that he will not stand in
    next year's European Parliament elections. He has been the co-chair of
    the committee for the past seven years.

    Lagendijk has fervently supported the current government in its reform
    efforts but, like many other pro-Turkey politicians in Europe,
    recently leveled serious criticism on a slowdown in the pace of
    reform. He warned that Turkey's growing influence in the Caucasus and
    the Middle East will not substitute for the reforms it fails to
    deliver.


    29 November 2008, Saturday
    TODAY'S ZAMAN ANKARA
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