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ANKARA: A Date For Negotiations

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  • ANKARA: A Date For Negotiations

    Turkish Press
    May 3 2004

    A Date For Negotiations
    BYEGM: 5/3/2004
    BY COSKUN KIRCA

    MILLIYET- Will the European Union give Turkey an exact date at the end
    of this year for starting membership negotiations? Firstly, getting a
    date is no guarantee that these negotiations will actually end in
    membership, though the 1963 Ankara Agreement is still in effect! Under
    this agreement, after Turkey's period of preparation and transition,
    the period of the customs union would be passed and this goal thereby
    achieved. This way Turkey was able to largely comply with the common
    trade policies. None of the countries which became EU members last
    weekend could have gone so far forward in their relations with the EU.
    Actually the EU countries accepted Turkey's membership at that time.
    For this reason, the acceptance of Ankara's candidacy at the 1999
    Helsinki summit was a declaration. So a date for membership
    negotiations would be nothing new.

    After the referendums on Cyprus, Turkey thought that both itself and
    the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC) should be rewarded by it
    getting a date for membership. The Turkish nation is also fixed on this
    expectation. If the EU doesn't give us a date at the end of the year,
    the Turkish nation will react very harshly. At this point, the EU has
    two alternatives. One is to accept us as a member in good faith, and
    the other is to keep Ankara in suspense for a long period of time, all
    the while pushing for great concessions required for membership.
    However, both of these alternatives require the EU to give Ankara a
    date. I guess the EU countries can see this obligation.

    Turkey should make clear to the EU countries which concessions we could
    never accept, to prevent the impression that we've left our future in
    the EU's hands by waiting at its threshold. One firm principle is that
    we can neither give up nor violate the pillars of our indivisible
    state. Secondly, we will neither accept the accusations of Armenian
    `genocide,' nor apologize to them, nor give them land or compensation.
    Thirdly, they shouldn't request from us anything that would violate our
    principle of secularism.



    SOURCE: OFFICE OF THE PRIME MINISTER, DIRECTORATE GENERAL OF PRESS AND
    INFORMATION
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