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Turkey & the EU - Reason to Worry

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  • Turkey & the EU - Reason to Worry

    Turkey and the EU

    Reason to worry

    Jun 2nd 2005 | ANKARA
    >From The Economist print edition


    The country with most to lose from the EU referendums may be Turkey

    WHAT do the French and Dutch rejections of the European Union
    constitution imply for Turkey's hopes of joining? If one believes the
    country's political leaders, nothing. "This result has nothing to do
    with Turkey's candidacy, we will continue on our path with the same
    enthusiasm," the Turkish prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, told
    parliament this week. His rhetoric was echoed by EU officials. And in
    theory they are right.

    The constitution makes no reference to Turkey's membership. In France
    (as in some other anti-Turkey countries, notably Austria) voters have
    been promised the chance to stop Turkey joining in a separate referendum
    on further enlargement, when the time comes. Moreover, last December's
    decision by EU leaders to promise Turkey the start of membership talks
    on October 3rd was a political one that can be changed only by consensus
    of all 25 EU members. Some optimists even venture to suggest that the
    defeat of the constitution could pave the way for a looser EU that it
    would be easier for Turkey to fit into.


    Yet the reality is more worrying for Turkey. The French and Dutch noes
    may be "the EU's internal problem", as Mr Erdogan claims. But they also
    reflect growing hostility around Europe to further enlargement of the
    EU-and, specifically, to the idea of taking in poor, big and Muslim
    Turkey. There is also a good chance that Germany's opposition Christian
    Democrats (CDU) will win the election expected in September. The CDU
    leader, Angela Merkel, is firmly opposed to Turkey's membership and has
    lobbied instead for a "privileged partnership" that has been roundly
    rejected by the Turks. Her hostility to full membership for Turkey is
    shared by France's Nicolas Sarkozy, a would-be presidential candidate in
    2007.

    Against this gloomy background, the wisest course for Turkey, according
    to the EU ambassador to Ankara, Hansjörg Kretschmer, is to ignore the
    ructions in Europe and focus on implementing the sweeping reforms that
    earned it the precious October date for talks. In one hopeful sign, Mr
    Erdogan last week appointed Ali Babacan, his young and pragmatic economy
    minister, to head the EU negotiations. Turkey is also about to sign a
    protocol extending its customs union with the EU to the ten new members
    that joined last year, including Cyprus.

    This week a long-delayed new penal code came into effect. But despite
    such radical provisions as making marital rape a crime, the code also
    contains several controversial articles-for example one that allows long
    prison terms for journalists who attack the Turkish military presence in
    northern Cyprus or describe as "genocide" the mass slaughter of
    Armenians during the first world war.

    There are, indeed, disturbing signs that Mr Erdogan may be pandering to
    a recent upsurge in nationalism that is being fanned both by
    anti-Turkish sentiment in Europe and by the country's hawkish generals,
    whose power may be eroded by EU reforms. Besides continued police
    harassment of Christians and other minorities, last month an appeal
    court in Ankara upheld the banning of Turkey's biggest teachers' union
    because it had said that the country's 14m Kurds should be able to
    educate their children in their mother tongue. Turkish academics had to
    cancel a conference to debate the Armenian tragedy after the justice
    minister, Cemil Cicek, accused them of "knifing Turkey in the back".

    Mr Cicek's outburst, concluded one senior EU diplomat, was "confirmation
    that the government no longer believes in the EU process." That view may
    be exaggerated, but there is disillusion with the EU among Mr Erdogan's
    conservative base. One example is perceived European indifference to
    restrictions on the Islamic headscarf. It was surely with his
    conservative base in mind that Mr Erdogan last week introduced
    legislation to reduce penalties for those who run underground courses to
    teach the Koran. The move brought renewed charges from Turkey's fierce
    secularists that Mr Erdogan's real intention is to move the country
    closer to an Islamic theocracy, and not to the EU. Turkey's many enemies
    in Europe would surely take pleasure in that.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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