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Turkey Sees Growing Reservations Over EU Bid

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  • Turkey Sees Growing Reservations Over EU Bid

    TURKEY SEES GROWING RESERVATIONS OVER EU BID

    Deutsche Welle
    14.10.2009
    Turkey

    eu and turkish flags in front of a mosque Groansicht des Bildes mit
    der Bildunterschrift: Turkey still needs to step up reforms to join
    the EU The EU's annual report on Turkey's membership bid has praised
    Ankara for its reform and foreign policy initiatives. But this is
    being met with little enthusiasm in Turkey as doubts over its bid
    continue to grow.

    The European Commission's annual progress report on Turkey's bid
    to join the European Union will have been welcome reading for the
    Turkish government. It was largely positive, stressing important steps
    on reforms to improve freedom of expression, efforts to resolve the
    conflict with Kurdish rebels and significant diplomatic initiatives,
    like improving relations with Armenia.

    Brussels did voice concerns about press freedom in relation to a
    multi-billion-euro tax-evasion case against media group Dogan Media
    Holding, a vocal critic of the current government.

    Even so, Ergemen Bagis, the cabinet minister responsible for Turkey's
    bid to join the EU, welcomed the report's largely positive findings.

    "EU membership is one of the basic goals of our government," Bagis
    said. "We will continue our efforts with great determination and will
    work hard to get a more positive report next year."

    No EU-wide support for Turkey

    However, Bagis' optimism is increasingly meaningless, according to
    Professor Cengiz Aktar, head of European Union studies at Istanbul's
    Bachesehir University. Aktar said such reports from the EU executive
    were merely becoming an academic exercise. He said the results
    represented "total schizophrenia."

    Armenian foreign minister Edouard Nalbandian and Turkish foreign
    minister Ahmet DavutogluBildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit
    der Bildunterschrift: Armenia and Turkey's foreign ministers have
    just signed an agreement to normalize relations

    "On the one hand, Turkey is now moving with this Kurdish opening
    and this opening towards Armenia," Aktar told Deutsche Welle letely
    stalled. It is like day and night."

    Aktar said the rest of Europe was absent.

    "The European Commission is there, but the European Union member states
    are not," he said. "They are not supporting Turkey in its endeavors."

    Currently, various EU members are blocking 15 of the 35 chapters -
    areas where reforms may be necessary to bring a country in line with
    EU legislation - that Turkey must complete to achieve membership. With
    only a handful of chapters remaining, the entire process is threatening
    to grind to a halt.

    Cyprus is a major sticking point

    Many of the chapters are blocked because of an impasse over the divided
    Mediterranean island of Cyprus. Turkey has refused to open its ports
    and airports to the Greek Cypriots until the EU lifts its embargo
    against the Turkish side of the island. The EU accession report
    warned that Turkey must meet its obligations to all EU members -
    including Cyprus.

    But Suat Kiniklioglu, spokesman for the Turkish parliamentary
    foreign affairs committee, said Turkey won't back down despite the
    EU requirements that it open direct trade with Cyprus.

    "There is no way we are going to open the ports to Greek Cyprus,"
    Kiniklioglu said.

    The row over the ports could come to a head at the end of this
    year. Under a protocol signed by Turkey with the EU, it risks having
    the talks suspended unless it opens its ports to Cyprus by December.

    Richard Howitt, a member of the European Parliament's committee on
    Turkey, said that Ankara was in danger of throwing away all the good
    work it had achieved with this year's report.

    "I warn them that there isn't too much ambiguity, I would even argue
    no ambiguity in that legal text agreed by the council ministers,"
    Howitt said. "So don't underestimate the threat of the talks being
    suspended altogether."

    But such a threat does not carry the weight it once did. For with
    French President Nicholas Sarkozy, who opposes Turkey's bid to join the
    27-nation bloc on principle, there is a growing belief both among the
    people and politicians that its bid is d o forever remain just that:
    a bid.
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