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ANKARA: Slovakia Rejects Change Of Rules In Turkey-EU Membership Tal

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  • ANKARA: Slovakia Rejects Change Of Rules In Turkey-EU Membership Tal

    SLOVAKIA REJECTS CHANGE OF RULES IN TURKEY-EU MEMBERSHIP TALKS

    Today's Zaman
    Nov 4 2009
    Turkey

    While extending Slovakia's full support for Turkey's bid to become a
    full member of the European Union, Slovak Foreign Minister Miroslav
    Lajcak has cautioned that changing preconditions set for accession to
    the bloc when Turkey has already started negotiations for membership
    is completely out of the question.

    Lajcak's remarks, during an interview with a group of journalists
    who were in the Slovak capital of Bratislava for President Abdullah
    Gul's official visit to the city, came as an implicit reference to
    Turkey-critics within the EU who are led by France and Germany.

    The EU opened accession talks with Ankara -- an EU candidate since
    1999 -- in October 2005, but these have been progressing slowly amid
    opposition from France and Germany. The unresolved Cyprus dispute
    and a slowdown of reforms in Turkey are other factors hampering the
    accession process.

    French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela
    Merkel are the most high-profile European politicians opposed to
    Turkey's accession. Sarkozy claims Turkey does not belong in Europe,
    while Merkel promotes a "privileged partnership" that falls short of
    membership, a formula Ankara categorically rejects. In Berlin in May,
    Merkel and Sarkozy made a joint statement declaring that they shared
    a common position regarding Turkey's accession to the EU, in that it
    should be offered a privileged partnership, not full EU membership.

    "When it fulfills the required criteria, Turkey should be accepted as
    a full member. Conditions should not be changed while negotiations
    are continuing," Lajcak said Tuesday. The Slovak minister's remarks
    are reminiscent of the stance displayed by Turkish Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan vis-a-vis the leaders of Germany and France,
    as he constantly warns the two leaders that the rules of the game
    cannot be changed halfway through.

    "Turkey is an influential country which plays a constructive role in
    its region. It has a deep knowledge of Iraq, Afghanistan and the Middle
    East. As the EU, we want to take advantage of Turkey's knowledge and
    experiences," Lajcak said, noting that he had observed Turkey's clout
    in the Balkans when he served as an EU representative in Bosnia.

    Lajcak, whose country entered the EU in 2004, was critical of the
    union's performance.

    "The EU should revive persuasiveness of the enlargement process. The
    union has recently focused so much on internal reforms, leading to a
    negative impact on enlargement perspectives. In the last six-seven
    years, the EU has been struggling with its internal matters," the
    minister said.

    Referring to the fact that during a Brussels summit last week, EU
    leaders approved a key concession to the Czech Republic that appears
    to clear the way for the adoption of the Lisbon Treaty, Lajcak said
    the time was now ripe for refocusing on the enlargement process. As of
    Tuesday, the Czech top court cleared the EU-reforming Lisbon Treaty,
    one of the last hurdles to its ratification.

    "Our answer to the question of from where the borders of the EU will
    pass is: the Balkans and Turkey," Lajcak went on to say.

    The minister, meanwhile, also lent support to Turkey's efforts to
    normalize its relations with its estranged neighbor Armenia, while
    urging swift resolution to the Cyprus issue.

    Lajcak said he believed that the normalization of relations between
    Armenia and Turkey would help in the resolution of other regional
    issues in the Caucasus, including the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute
    between Armenia and Azerbaijan. He noted that his government has
    been closely following the government's democratization initiative,
    which is expected to expand freedoms for Turkey's Kurds.

    In Bratislava, Merkel and Sarkozy got their share of criticism from
    Gul in a speech delivered at the Turkey-Slovakia Business Council
    meeting held on Tuesday. "Some of the big countries of the EU have
    forgotten the principle of pacta sunt servanda," Gul said, referring to
    a principle of international law in Latin which means that agreements
    must be kept. "We haven't seen support from these countries on our way
    to EU membership. Such manners by these countries have been harming
    confidence in the EU," he added, in apparent reference to France
    and Germany.

    A recent survey has revealed the impact of the French and German
    leaders' constant objection to Turkey's EU bid, with a significant
    loss of confidence in these two countries among the public. According
    to the survey, conducted in August by the Ankara-based International
    Strategic Research Organization (USAK), France is third on the list
    of countries regarded as a threat by the public, while there has
    been a large decrease in Turkish people's opinion of Germany as a
    friendly country.
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