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Dutch Queen Tells Turkey "First Steps Taken" On EU Membership Road

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  • Dutch Queen Tells Turkey "First Steps Taken" On EU Membership Road

    DUTCH QUEEN TELLS TURKEY "FIRST STEPS TAKEN" ON EU MEMBERSHIP ROAD

    NIS News Bulletin, Netherlands
    Feb 28 2007

    ANKARA, 01/03/07 - Queen Beatrix has said on her state visit to
    Turkey that the first steps towards Turkish membership of the EU have
    been taken. She did not mention other sensitive issues, such as the
    Armenian genocide.

    In her speech at the state dinner given by President Ahmet Sezer, the
    queen said she expects much of the mutual relations between Turkey
    and the Netherlands. "Today, Turkey is seen as a strong NATO ally,
    which shares common values with the other countries such as respect for
    fundamental freedoms, and which takes strong action against terrorism
    and extremist violence."

    The monarch said both Turkey and the Netherlands and Turkey and Europe
    have become closer to one another in recent years. "I am of course
    thinking in the first place here about the decision taken at the end
    of 2004 under the Dutch presidency to start accession negotiations
    between Turkey and the European Union."

    The negotiations will "undoubtedly be time-consuming" and "many
    obstacles" must be overcome, but "the first steps have been taken."

    The queen added: "Certainly impressive are the many efforts in
    innumerable areas that your country has in the last few years
    undertaken to make the achievement of the goal established possible."

    The queen praised the role that Turkish immigrants play in Dutch
    society. "Successful young Turkish Dutch are to be found in innumerable
    professions and many places in our society: entrepreneurs, students,
    teachers and politicians. (...) The increasing interweaving of our
    countries holds a clear promise for the future," Beatrix concluded.

    Conservative (VVD) MP Hans Van Baalen, chairman of the Lower House
    foreign affairs standing committee, had called on Beatrix to bring up
    the Armenian question. In Turkey, its forbidden to say that hundreds
    of thousands of Armenians were massacred by the Turkish regime around
    1915. The queen kept silent on the question, as on other human rights
    questions.

    The Turkish president called the Netherlands a "friend and ally" and
    praised its "straightforward and objective" position. Sezer did have
    some provocative words. He said the Turks are "closely" following the
    maintenance by the 400,000 Turkish people in the Netherlands of their
    "social rights, their original language and their cultural identity".
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