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  • Turkey Creeps Further Towards EU

    TURKEY CREEPS FURTHER TOWARDS EU
    Paul Harrington

    Agence France Presse
    Dec 20 2009

    Turkey will take another small step towards EU membership on Monday,
    despite its abiding failure to deal openly with Cyprus and some
    European reticence to accept a large, mainly Muslim nation.

    Meanwhile Croatia, which began accession talks at the same time in
    2005, will push forward with its own, more advanced, claim to become
    the 28th EU nation.

    The European Union will open formal talks with Turkey on the
    environmental issue, the 12th of 35 policy chapters which any candidate
    nation must successfully negotiate prior to membership.

    But for some analysts this is more wheelspin than progress.

    "The rhythm of the accession talks remains singularly slow,"
    said Didier Billion, researcher at the Institute of Strategic and
    International Relations in Paris.

    Michael Emerson, analyst at the Brussels-based Centre for European
    Policy Studies, is even less impressed.

    "This is an unreal exercise," he told AFP.

    "Some good spirit in the European Commission has decided to keep the
    process going along, but fundamentally it is blocked politically at
    the highest level and in the most fundamental way," he added.

    Since Turkey officially opened membership talks in 2005, it has opened
    the 35 EU policy chapters at a rate of three per year.

    During that time it has managed to successfully negotiate and close
    just one of those, that of science and research.

    Eight chapters remain totally blocked due to Ankara's failure to open
    its borders to EU member Cyprus.

    The island of Cyprus has been divided since 1974 when Turkey occupied
    the north in response to an Athens-engineered coup in Nicosia aimed
    at uniting the island with Greece.

    On top of that there are the more fundamental issues at play, with
    France, Germany and Austria among the EU nations which would prefer
    to give Turkey some kind of 'privileged partnership' status rather
    than full-blown membership, an option rejected by Ankara.

    French President Nicolas Sarkozy has led the lobby which doesn't see
    Turkey as a European country.

    "We want Turkey to be a bridge between East and West," Sarkozy declared
    in June.

    Europeans are also very critical of the slow pace of internal reform
    in Turkey which, unlike the Western Balkans nations, has no guarantee
    of eventual EU membership.

    EU foreign ministers early this month stopped short of imposing further
    sanctions though it was a very mixed scorecard with acknowledged
    progress in some areas, notably the normalisation of relations with
    Armenia.

    "Progress is now expected without further delay," the foreign ministers
    warned in a joint statement.

    Cypriot Foreign Minister Markos Kyprianou displayed his country's
    frustration by announcing that Ankara would attach new conditions to
    five more unopened policy chapters, making a total of six.

    Days later there was more controversy when Turkey's constitutional
    court banned the pro-Kurdish DTP party.

    Meanwhile Croatia, much farther along the accession track than Turkey,
    will itself take another step Monday by successfully closing two more
    of the negotiating chapters, tipping it towards the halfway mark, with
    17 of the 35 successfully completed and just a handful left to open.

    Its path towards the EU has not been all plain sailing either.

    Slovenia blocked its progress for almost a year over a border dispute.

    The talks have started moving recently, after the two nations agreed
    to put their dispute to international arbitration.

    However Llubljana has not yet ratified the deal and is continuing
    to block three chapters -- on environment, fisheries and foreign and
    defence policy.

    The EU also wants to see fuller cooperation from Zagreb with the
    International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY)
    and more progress in the battle against corruption.

    Nevertheless the European Commission has said that it would be possible
    to complete the accession negotiations next year and fulfill Croatia's
    ambition of joining the EU in 2011.
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