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Cyprus Should Not Be Used As Excuse To Slow Down Turkey's EU Members

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  • Cyprus Should Not Be Used As Excuse To Slow Down Turkey's EU Members

    CYPRUS SHOULD NOT BE USED AS EXCUSE TO SLOW DOWN TURKEY'S EU MEMBERSHIP, GUL SAYS

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    19.09.2007 17:39 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkey's president Abdullah Gul called on European
    nations Wednesday not to use the dispute over Cyprus as an excuse to
    slow down Turkey's European Union membership.

    Abdullah Gul was speaking in the parliament of the self-declared
    Turkish Cypriot state during his first visit outside Turkey since his
    election to presidency last month. Turkish presidents traditionally
    make their first trip abroad to the Mediterranean island's north.

    "It is not right to link the Cyprus problem with Turkey's EU
    membership. This is a wrong assessment," Gul said. "The Cyprus issue
    should not be used to slow down or prevent Turkey's EU membership
    process."

    Turkey began membership negotiations in October 2005.

    But progress came to a virtual standstill late last year when EU
    leaders decided to partially suspend negotiations to protest Ankara's
    refusal to open its ports to trade with Cyprus - an EU member.

    Turkish officials have reiterated they will not implement a 2005
    agreement to open Turkish ports and airports to Cyprus until the EU
    lives up to its commitment to lift the trade embargo on the Turkish
    Cypriot community. Gul called for the international embargo against
    northern Cyprus to be lifted. "The international community should
    understand that the discrimination and restrictions imposed on Turkish
    Cypriot people must now end," he said, The Associated Press reports

    Turkey does not recognize the government of Cyprus, which has led to a
    standoff between Brussels and Ankara over the membership bid. Cyprus
    has been divided into a Greek Cypriot south - represented by the
    internationally recognized government - and a Turkish Cypriot north
    since 1974, when Turkey invaded after a failed Athens-backed coup by
    supporters of union with Greece.

    In 2004, Greek Cypriot voters overwhelmingly rejected a UN
    reunification plan that the Turkish Cypriots accepted in a separate
    referendum. The United Nations has repeatedly pressed the two sides
    to reopen negotiations.
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