EU ASSURES OF COMMON INTERESTS WITH TURKEY IN CAUCASUS
PanARMENIAN.NET
09.09.2009 10:15 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ An EU commissioner enumerated stability in the
Southern Caucasus among common interests of Turkey and the union. EU
Commissioner for enlargement Olli Rehn said that stability in the
Southern Caucasus, peace in the Middle East, security of energy
supplies is an issue on which the EU and Turkey had common interests.
"They are issues that we cannot solve or deal with alone," Rehn said
during a conference at the University of Copenhagen.
Rehn said the EU's enlargement process was both about domestic reforms
and strategic partnerships.
"As I told the EU foreign ministers in Stockholm this weekend, Europe
and Turkey share long-term strategic interests," he said.
Rehn said that the EU had always been clear with Turkey that freedom
of thought, freedom of speech and freedom of press were fundamental
values in any open and democratic European society.
"They are a necessary condition for EU membership. The same goes for
religious freedoms, women's rights, minority rights and trade union
rights," he said.
"And EU conditionality works. Without it, the Nobel Prize-winning
author Orhan Pamuk might not be a free man; Ante Gotovina and Radovan
Karadzic would not be in prison, along with 40 others of the most
wanted by the UN War Crimes Tribunal's; and Bosnia and Herzegovina
and Serbia might have succumbed to similar nationalist forces that
drove them to war before. These are milestone achievements," Rehn
also said, Anatolian Agency reported.
Turkey became an EU candidate country in December 1999. The union
launched accession talks with Turkey on October 3, 2005.
PanARMENIAN.NET
09.09.2009 10:15 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ An EU commissioner enumerated stability in the
Southern Caucasus among common interests of Turkey and the union. EU
Commissioner for enlargement Olli Rehn said that stability in the
Southern Caucasus, peace in the Middle East, security of energy
supplies is an issue on which the EU and Turkey had common interests.
"They are issues that we cannot solve or deal with alone," Rehn said
during a conference at the University of Copenhagen.
Rehn said the EU's enlargement process was both about domestic reforms
and strategic partnerships.
"As I told the EU foreign ministers in Stockholm this weekend, Europe
and Turkey share long-term strategic interests," he said.
Rehn said that the EU had always been clear with Turkey that freedom
of thought, freedom of speech and freedom of press were fundamental
values in any open and democratic European society.
"They are a necessary condition for EU membership. The same goes for
religious freedoms, women's rights, minority rights and trade union
rights," he said.
"And EU conditionality works. Without it, the Nobel Prize-winning
author Orhan Pamuk might not be a free man; Ante Gotovina and Radovan
Karadzic would not be in prison, along with 40 others of the most
wanted by the UN War Crimes Tribunal's; and Bosnia and Herzegovina
and Serbia might have succumbed to similar nationalist forces that
drove them to war before. These are milestone achievements," Rehn
also said, Anatolian Agency reported.
Turkey became an EU candidate country in December 1999. The union
launched accession talks with Turkey on October 3, 2005.