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Schroeder warns Turkey must not go back on reforms

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  • Schroeder warns Turkey must not go back on reforms

    Schroeder warns Turkey must not go back on reforms

    AP Worldstream
    May 02, 2005

    German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder has assured Turkey that membership
    negotiations with the European Union will start as scheduled on
    Oct. 3, but has warned it must not go back on reforms, according to
    an interview published in a Turkish newspaper on Monday.

    Schroeder, who has long backed Turkey's bid to join the bloc, was
    speaking ahead of his trip to Turkey, which begins Tuesday.

    There have been concerns that a recent slowdown in the pace of Turkish
    reforms might derail the talks.

    "It's important to continue on the path that has been chosen.
    Reforms, especially in terms of basic freedoms and human and minority
    rights, need to be implemented and it needs to be made sure there's
    no going back on the reforms. For this, as Prime Minister (Recep
    Tayyip) Erdogan has said, there needs to be a change in mentality.
    This won't be possible over night," Schroeder was quoted as saying.

    "The negotiations will start on Oct. 3. The conditions that Turkey
    must fulfill are known. The negotiations will definitely be long and
    difficult. The progress that Turkey makes in the reform process will
    determine to a large extent the progress it makes in the negotiations."

    At a December European Union summit, the bloc agreed to open membership
    talks with Turkey. But it must sign a customs agreement that would
    mean de facto recognition of the government of Cyprus _ a step it
    has been hesitant to take.

    Schroeder said a recent call by Erdogan to establish political
    relations with Armenia while jointly researching the killings of
    Armenians during World War I "a step in the right direction." Armenia
    has rejected the proposal.

    Armenians accuse Turkey of genocide in the killing of up to 1.5 million
    Armenians as part of a 1915-23 campaign to force them out of eastern
    Turkey. But Turkey denies that the killings were genocide and says
    the death count is inflated.
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