Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

French politicians oppose Turkey's EU membership

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

  • French politicians oppose Turkey's EU membership

    Associated Press Worldstream
    December 12, 2004 Sunday 1:19 PM Eastern Time

    French politicians oppose Turkey's EU membership

    PARIS


    France's centrist leader said in an interview published Sunday that
    Turkey has shown repeatedly that it is not part of Europe, while a
    right-wing politician urged voters to reject the European Union
    constitution to keep Turkey out.

    Turkey "does not belong to Europe, and shows that in multiple ways,"
    said Francois Bayrou, head of the centrist Union for French
    Democracy, in the Le Journal du Dimanche newspaper.

    It "militarily occupies Cyprus, a European state, and refuses to
    recognize it," Bayrou told the weekly paper. "It (opposes) any
    recognition of the Armenian genocide, maintains practices that hurt
    the status of women."

    The remarks came days before European leaders are to decide whether
    to open negotiations with Ankara.

    Right-wing politician Philippe de Villiers told Radio J that a "no"
    vote in France's planned referendum on the European Constitution
    would be useful in helping to prevent Turkey's membership.

    It would be a "vote of precaution for those who don't want Turkey" in
    the EU. If the EU constitution is defeated, he said, "that will level
    everything."

    The French political class is deeply divided over the question of the
    admission of poor, majority-Muslim Turkey to the EU, which currently
    has 25 members.

    EU leaders are to meet Thursday and Friday to decide on opening
    membership talks with Ankara.

    President Jacques Chirac supports Turkey's EU membership, while Prime
    Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin, a centrist, is skeptical and Chirac's
    party, the Union for a Popular Movement, is opposed.

    Chirac has warned against politicians' mixing the referendum and
    Turkey's membership.

    "These are two problems that have nothing to do with each other," he
    said recently.

    The referendum is to be held likely in the final six months of next
    year.

    Chirac has said that French citizens also will have the "final word"
    on Turkey's entrance through a referendum when the time comes - and
    if EU leaders agree to start membership talks.
Working...
X