Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Erdogan And Merkel Spar Ahead Of Turkey Visit

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Erdogan And Merkel Spar Ahead Of Turkey Visit

    ERDOGAN AND MERKEL SPAR AHEAD OF TURKEY VISIT
    By Honor Mahoney

    Axis of Logic
    http://axisoflogic.com/artman/publish/Articl e_59099.shtml
    March 29 2010

    The integration of the three million Turkish nationals in Germany has
    once again emerged as a source of discord between Berlin and Ankara
    ahead of German Chancellor Angela Merkel's visit to Turkey today
    (29 March).

    Due for her first visit to the country in four years, Ms Merkel and
    her Anatolian counterpart have engaged in a familiar exchange of
    barbs concerning the role of Turkish citizens in German society.

    Ahead of the trip, Turkish leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan said that
    secondary schools for the children of Turkish immigrants should be
    set up while Germany should also allow dual citizenship.

    Ms Merkel responded via her weekly video message with a clear refusal
    of the demands. She said that integration into German society does
    not mean "assimilation" or "giving up the home country." Migrants
    should share in a successful society through work and family life.

    She added: "That of course means learning the German language and
    abiding by German laws."

    The exchange - a similar one was held in 2008 around the time Mr
    Erdogan was visiting Berlin - comes against the backdrop of Turkey's
    bid for EU membership.

    Germany is opposed to Ankara's full membership of the EU. Turkey, which
    formally opened the by now painfully slow EU membership negotiations
    in 2005, has responded by becoming increasingly assertive in its own
    backyard, including loudly criticising Israel's activities.

    Among the topics likely to be brought up include possible sanctions
    against Iran for its nuclear programme. While Ms Merkel favours
    sanctions, Mr Erdorgan, whose country currently is sitting in the
    UN Security Council as a non-permanent member, is against further
    sanctions, arguing instead for a diplomatic solution.

    Meanwhile, Spiegel Online reports that Ms Merkel wants to raise the
    issue of Armenia and the ongoing dispute over whether mass killings
    of Armenians during the First World War amounted to genocide. Turkey
    says that the 1915 massacre of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire was
    does not warrant the moniker, something Mr Erdogan repeated in the
    latest edition of German news weekly Der Spiegel.

    While political tensions between the two countries are running high,
    they remain closely linked on the business front. Turkey remains one
    of the most important export markets for the German economy. This has
    meant that leading business organisations in Germany have approached
    the whole question of Turkish EU membership with a more conciliatory
    and pragmatic tone than can be heard at the political level.
Working...
X