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Turkey turns its back on the EU: The New York Times

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  • Turkey turns its back on the EU: The New York Times

    Turkey turns its back on the EU: The New York Times

    17:29, 5 April, 2014


    YEREVAN, APRIL 5, ARMENPRESS. A generation ago, it was Ankara's
    assumption that its central role in the region's geopolitics would
    translate into acceptance as a member of the prosperous European
    Union, now numbering 28 countries. But that assumption has frayed. As
    reports "Armenpress", The New York Times stated this in one of its
    most recent articles.

    Among other things it was particularly noted: "After months of
    increasingly authoritarian rule by an embattled Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the portals of the club seem more than ever to
    be closing on Turkey. And paradoxically, Turkey's most recent
    elections may deepen its estrangement, raising questions not only
    about European readiness to embrace Turkey but also about Mr.
    Erdogan's interest in pursuing it.

    "It is becoming clear that Erdogan's Turkey does not belong to
    Europe," a prominent German politician, Andreas Scheuer, said after
    the Turkish leader accepted his party's victory in the municipal
    ballot on Sunday not just as a personal vindication but a mandate for
    what an opponent called a "witch hunt" against his adversaries. "A
    country in which the government threatens its critics and tramples
    democratic values cannot belong to Europe," Mr. Scheuer said.

    "What happens next will worry many Turks as they hear Erdogan vowing
    to get even with his critics and opponents," the columnist Simon
    Tisdall said in The Guardian. "That Turkey is now a deeply divided
    nation is only too clear. That Erdogan's future actions may serve to
    deepen those divisions is the great fear."

    The effort to accede to the European Union -- haltingly underway since
    2005 -- pulls at one set of reflexes, while Mr. Erdogan's style tugs at
    another. Last year, he deployed the police against protesters in
    Istanbul's Gezi Park. In December a major corruption scandal broke
    over his aides and his family. Just in recent weeks, his government
    has moved to block Twitter and YouTube -- depicted as his enemies'
    tools in a campaign to besmirch him with faked evidence of
    malfeasance."

    http://armenpress.am/eng/news/757000/turkey-turns-its-back-on-the-eu-the-new-york-times.html

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