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Financial Times: Turkey still on course to join EU

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  • Financial Times: Turkey still on course to join EU

    Turkey still on course to join EU, says Gul
    By Haig Simonian at Gottweig Abbey, Austria

    Published: June 5 2005 18:05 | Last updated: June 5 2005 18:05

    http://news.ft.com/cms/s/16be8aa8-d5e2-11d9-8040-00000e2511c8.html

    Turkey-EU

    Turkey believes it is still on track to become a full member of the
    European Union, in spite of last week's referendum defeats for the
    constitutional treaty in France and the Netherlands.

    In the first comprehensive comments by a senior official, Abdullah
    Gul, Turkey's foreign minister, said potential Turkish membership
    had not played a big role in the emphatic No votes.

    "Turkey wasn't the reason for a No in these referendums. It wasn't
    about full Turkish membership of the EU," he said.

    By contrast, the leaders of Austria and Slovenia, two EU member
    states with the biggest doubts about Ankara's accession, showed clear
    reservations in the wake of last week's decisions.

    At the annual European Forum organised by the Lower Austria state
    government, Wolfgang Schussel and Janez Jansa, the Austrian and
    Slovenian leaders, were conspicuously silent about Turkey, while
    stressing the need for the EU to embrace Romania, Bulgaria and the
    western Balkans.

    The idea of Turkish membership is deeply unpopular in Austria and
    Slovenia, partly because of the predominantly Islamic state's relative
    proximity to countries on the EU's eastern fringes.

    Mr Schussel had been among those expressing caution in the run-up
    to the decision to open accession talks with Ankara next October. "I
    think we should go forward unemotionally, professionally and step by
    step," he said.

    Mr Jansa said Turkish membership should be made subject to a
    referendum, and criticised the French government for not grasping the
    degree of anti-Turkish sentiment, which had helped swing the No vote
    in France.

    Mr Gul said: "We will continue to live up to the expectations of our
    people and deliver on further reforms."

    He argued that Ankara remained committed to encouraging free speech
    and addressing difficult issues in Turkey's past, in spite of the
    cancellation of an academic conference on the alleged genocide of
    Armenians under the Ottoman empire.

    Mr Gul said the conference, organised by Istanbul's Bosphorus
    University, had been "postponed" and that the importance of the meeting
    had been exaggerated abroad, as such issues had already been widely
    discussed in Turkey.

    The conference, bitterly attacked by Turkish nationalists and a senior
    minister, had been widely seen as a breakthrough on what has been a
    taboo subject.

    Armenians, backed by a number of governments, describe the events
    of 1915 as a genocide in which up to 1.5m people were killed. Turkey
    recognises large numbers died, but alleges atrocities took place on
    both sides and puts these in the context of the chaos of the first
    world war and the twilight of the Ottoman empire.
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