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ANKARA: Euro experts mull over polishing Turkey's image

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  • ANKARA: Euro experts mull over polishing Turkey's image

    Hürriyet, Turkey
    Nov 15 2008

    Euro experts mull over polishing Turkey's image

    ANKARA - European officials have urged Turkey to step up its efforts
    to promote its image in the European Union during a conference on
    "Influence Strategies of Turkey in EU member states," an endeavor they
    say is an integral part of the accession process.

    "The global strategy should be to move away from emotional issues and
    try to communicate rational issues," Jacques Lafitte, founder of
    Avisa Partners, an EU Public Affairs Consultancy firm, told the
    Hürriyet Daily News, on the sidelines of the conference held
    at BaÅ?kent University.

    "Try to tell Europeans that Turkey is a successful country on the
    economic side, which it is. People do not know about it," he said, and
    advised restraint from wasting energy arguing against marginal
    opinions within Europe.

    Thomas Grunert, head of the Interparliamentary Delegations Unit at the
    European Parliament, said European parliamentarians are not satisfied
    with changes to Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code, an image
    spoiler for Turkey, speaking to the Daily News. "The European
    parliament would like to go beyond and see the article dropped or
    further modified to guarantee even more freedom of expression,"
    Grunert said.

    He said there was a sort of disappointment in Europe over the pace of
    Turkey's accession process. "2008 was the year of European
    integration: It is almost over, and many people were expecting more
    progress, although we understand there were some negative internal
    developments," Grunert said.

    Turkey ignores the undecided
    Vural Ã-ger, a German member of the European Parliament, asserted
    that Turkey must differentiate its communication strategies toward
    different target groups. "You have to speak differently to a senior
    conservative German male member of Parliament, than to a young female
    MP from Bulgaria," Ã-ger said as he differentiated between
    countries who are favorable, reluctant, or indifferent to Turkey's
    accession to the EU.

    "Turkey must concentrate on the latter," Ã-ger said, adding that
    excessive campaigning in countries like France or Austria, where
    public opinion is heavily against Turkey's accession, would be a waste
    of energy.

    "Undecided countries are ignored by Turkey. When Turkey is on the
    agenda of the European Parliament, it is members from Austria, France,
    Germany or Netherlands, reluctant member states, who take the stage
    first. We hardly hear Poles or Romanians speak about Turkey," Ã-ger
    said.

    Sensitive topics of Turkish foreign policy should be handled with a
    cool head, Lafitte said. "I know that Cyprus is a very difficult
    domestic topic in Turkey, but on that, the best thing to do is to stay
    calm.

    "It is pretty much the same with the French law on Armenian claims,"
    said Lafitte, referring to the law adopted by the French national
    assembly, but not discussed in the French Senate, that criminalizes
    denying the Armenian claims of genocide. "I think it is the historians
    duty to write history. But there was a complete overreaction in
    Turkey, which antagonized public opinion in France," Lafitte said.
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