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  • EU, amid growing clouds, bids to reassure Turkey

    Agence France Presse -- English
    May 24, 2005 Tuesday 3:53 PM GMT

    EU, amid growing clouds, bids to reassure Turkey

    BRUSSELS


    The European Union sought Tuesday to reassure Turkey that plans to
    start membership talks this year remain on track, despite uncertainty
    over the EU constitution and the political leadership in Germany.

    The EU's executive commission underlined that the decision to start
    negotiations with Ankara on October 3, albeit depending on specific
    conditions, had been taken by EU leaders at a summit last December.

    "There has been a decision made by unanimity by the highest political
    level in the EU ... to start accession talks with Turkey on 3
    October," said Krisztina Nagy, spokeswoman for EU enlargement
    commissioner Olli Rehn.

    The offer was conditional on Ankara signing a protocol extending a
    customs agreement with the EU to the bloc's 10-member states --
    including the divided island of Cyprus -- as well as implementing a
    package of legal reforms.

    But the EU said there were no immediate concerns about these
    conditions.

    "The commission is doing its job in order to prepare for the mandate
    it has received. We are doing our work. The Turkish authorities are
    doing their work as well," the spokeswoman added.

    Turkey's hopes of joining the currently 25-nation EU have been
    clouded by uncertainty over the EU's constitution, which is designed
    to prevent decision-making gridlock in the expanding bloc.

    Specifically French voters are threatening to reject the EU charter
    in a referendum next Sunday, in part at least fueled by public
    opposition to Turkey's entry into a bloc in which French influence is
    increasingly waning.

    If the constitution were rejected -- as forecast by consistent
    opinion poll findings -- the 25-nation bloc would be plunged into
    unprecedented crisis, and could spend years rethinking its overall
    strategic direction.

    In theory last December's decision on Turkey is irreversible,
    whatever happens to the bloc, since all EU states have signed up to
    it.

    But speculation has been further fueled by the political turmoil in
    Germany after Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder's Social Democrats won a
    crucial election at the weekend.

    Schroeder has called for national elections to be brought forward by
    a year -- in a move which in theory could let in the opposition
    Christian Democrats, who have far more reservations about Turkey's EU
    bid.

    Turkey has put a brave face on the possibility of losing a staunch
    supporter in Berlin for its EU application.

    "Hopefully, we will start the negotiations on October 3," Foreign
    Minister Abdullah Gul said Monday. "Any change in this is out of the
    question as long as we fulfill our obligations and we are fulfilling
    them meticulously."

    French President Jacques Chirac also intervened in the Turkey
    membership debate Tuesday, but in the opposite sense from the EU
    commission -- arguing that a "yes" vote in the constitution would
    make it harder for Turkey to join.

    Turkey "still has a long way to go, even longer as the European Union
    is preparing to take a new step in affirming its values" by adopting
    the EU constitution, he said in a letter to Armenian activists.

    Many of France's 400,000-strong Armenians are opposed to Turkey's EU
    hopes. They have long protested about the mass killings of Armenians
    under the Ottoman Empire in 1915-1917, recognized as genocide by
    several countries.

    "Every member state will be bound by it, whether in terms of
    pluralism, non-discrimination, tolerance, justice, solidarity,
    equality between men and women (or) respect for minorities," Chirac
    wrote.
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