Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

France: Pres. Candidate Royal conditionally backs Turkey's EU bid

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

  • France: Pres. Candidate Royal conditionally backs Turkey's EU bid

    AKI, Italy
    March 26 2007


    FRANCE: ROYAL CONDITIONALLY BACKS TURKEY'S EU BID



    Paris, 26 March (AKI) - Socialist presidential candidate Segolene
    Royal has stated she supports Turkey's application to join the
    European Union "in principle," but not until the 27-member bloc is
    revitalised. "I support the bid in principle but not now because
    Europe is stalled, and before expanding, we have to re-start it,"
    says Royal in her new book, 'Maintenanant' (Now), published in France
    on Tuesday.

    Royal, who with conservative UMP party candidate Nicolas Sarkozy and
    centrist UDF nominee Francois Bayrou are three current frontrunners
    in France's presidential race, is the only one have expressed support
    for Ankara's EU bid.

    But like France's president Jacques Chirac (from the UMP party),
    Royal says in her book that French voters will have the final say in
    a referendum, and "it will be the job of the head of state to to
    defend their decision."

    Royal had previously been criticised for "evasive" previous remarks
    stating that her position on Turkey's bid was "that of the French
    people."

    Royal said no "geographical" argument should be used against Turkey
    joining the EU. "Turkey is not a territory but a political project,"
    her book states. Religious arguments also do not hold up: "Europe is
    not Christian club.... it contains millions of citizens who are
    Muslims," she states.

    Provided Turkey achieves the economic, democratic and other reforms
    required of it by the EU, Europe has much to gain geopolitically by
    admitting the country, "in a world haunted by a clash of
    civilisations," Royal argues.

    "Democrats in Turkey are ardently partisan, and their European
    perspective helps to consolidate a Europe based on the rule of law.
    It also helps combat those elements that want to deny the genocide of
    the Armenians," Royal's book states, referring to the killings of up
    to 1.5 million Armenians they claim were carried out between
    1915-1923 by Ottoman Turks.

    Royal said last October that Turkey needs to recognise the mass
    killings of Armenians as genocide if it wants to join the EU. Sarkozy
    and Bayrou both back a 'special partnership' for Turkey with the EU
    while far-right candidate Jean-Marie Le Pen - currently trailing
    fourth in opinion polls - rejects even this.

    The presidential election is slated for 22 April with a run-off on 6
    May.


    http://www.adnki.com/index_2Level_English .php?cat=Politics&loid=8.0.398912760&par=0
Working...
X