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A Time Of Turbulence For Turkey?

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  • A Time Of Turbulence For Turkey?

    A TIME OF TURBULENCE FOR TURKEY?

    7DAYS, United Arab Emirates
    Feb 6 2007

    Whichever way you look at it, Turkey slowly seems to be beset by
    an increasing number of internal and external political pressures
    that are destabilising its economic outlook. The EU admission debate
    is increasingly swinging away from Turkish entry, and comments from
    French presidential candidate Nicholas Sarkozy underline the growing
    unwillingness of EU member states to accept Turkey as a member.

    "Seventy-five million people live in Turkey. This number will rise to
    100 million in 25 years. This is a very big population and culture but
    [Turkey] is not European... Shall we build Europe with those who are
    not Europeans?", Sakozy said in a recent television interview.

    Pressure is also coming from the old thorn, Cyprus, following the
    signing of natural gas exploration contracts between Lebanon, Egypt
    and the internationally recognised southern Cypriot government.

    Cypriot membership of the EU has added the veto factor to the entire
    Europe debate, with the country able and more than willing to use
    its new EU member state rights. Despite the overwhelming support
    of northern Cypriots to reunify the country, the southern Cypriot
    government is hell bent on ensuring that any reunification is done
    according to its own desires. And it is very interested in ensuring
    that Turkey pays the price for the 1974 invasion/intervention
    (depending on your point of view).

    In northern Iraq, the growing control over oil and gas assets by local
    Kurdish authorities and the unwillingness of the US and its Kurdish
    allies to crack down on PKK fighters based in northern Iraq is also
    closing off that avenue of export growth. With Turkish firms dealing
    in petroleum products now needing the approval of local Kurdish
    authorities, the taste of doing business there has begun to sour
    for Ankara.

    The gas contracts signed with Iran also seem to have become worthless,
    with Tehran providing an unstable supply depending on its own internal
    needs. The other major supplier of gas to Turkey, Russia, does not
    inspire confidence in many. The only positive point on this front
    is the growing importance of the Baku-Ceyhan pipeline, which is a
    valuable strategic asset for the country in energy terms.

    The Armenian issue has returned to prominence, following the
    assassination of journalist Hrant Dink by a nationalist youth.

    Despite the outpouring of anger in Turkey over the killing, it will
    likely be used by opponents of Ankara to push the Armenian genocide
    debate forward around the world. The annual presidential veto of US
    legislation recognising the genocide may not be employed.

    All this while, across the border, Turkey has watched as its poorer
    neighbours Bulgaria and Romania are beginning to enjoy the benefits
    of EU membership. Overall, the past year for Turkey was an annus
    horribilis in political terms. And in Turkey, the political news of
    the day usually ends up affecting the markets. With 65.26 per cent of
    shares on the Istanbul bourse in the hands of foreign investors, any
    backward trends in the political security of the country could well see
    a pull out inspiring the sort of economic mini-crisis seen in May 2006.

    Two more critical political points will also be crossed this year:
    the presidential election in May 2007 and the general parliamentary
    elections set for the end of the year. The way in which the present
    AK Party government, headed by Recep Tayyip Erdogan, deals with all
    of these issues will keep many a Turkish market analyst on edge.

    Although the economy's fundamentals are still remarkably sound,
    especially in comparison with the 1990s, the ability for political
    events to inspire economic instability should not be underestimated
    by investors.

    http://www.7days.ae/en/2007/02/06/a-ti me-of-turbulence-for-turkey.html
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