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  • ISTANBUL: 'Turkey's EU accession no longer on the horizon'

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    May 27 2014


    'Turkey's EU accession no longer on the horizon'

    GÃ`NAY HÄ°LAL AYGÃ`N

    May 27, 2014, Tuesday



    As Turkey's hope for accession to the European Union gradually fades
    away, the result of the elections held across the EU over the weekend
    to determine the European Parliament (EP) deputies has dealt another
    blow to the hopes of Turkey.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an and his government have lately
    drawn constant criticism from the West, including member states of the
    EU, for recent intolerant and oppressive laws which are in obvious
    violation of freedom and democracy. Remarks from top EU officials
    suggest that Turkey has retreated from its positive steps and
    improvements in terms of democracy and free speech over the last few
    years. Now, with the rise of Euroskeptics and the far right in the EP
    elections, observers consider Turkey's negotiation process for
    becoming an EU member to be in a more unfavorable position than ever.

    Bugün daily columnist Nuh GönültaÅ? wrote a Tuesday piece titled
    `Farewell to Europe.' `Although we have a specific ministry in charge
    of our EU affairs, today I have solid reasons to think that those
    governing Turkey are now determined not to be admitted to the EU,'
    GönültaÅ? said. According to the columnist, Justice and Development
    Party (AK Party) officials have a basic approach, in which being
    anti-EU is among the top priorities. Those who regarded the EU as the
    source of every evil before they came to power probably continue to
    think in the same way after they being elected to government, GönültaÅ?
    wrote. `Why would those who called the EU a 'union of Christian
    countries' in the 1990s start thinking differently in the 2000s?'
    asked GönültaÅ?. `Prime Minister ErdoÄ?an is a leader who believes that
    the EU will never accept Turkey as a member and at the same time he
    does not even want the country to join the the EU. According to
    ErdoÄ?an, the EU is stalling Turkey in order to win compromises from
    the country, like the unification of Cyprus or forcing it to
    acknowledge the existence of the '1915 genocide' of Armenians,'
    GönültaÅ? said. The AK Party took serious steps to comply with the EU
    standards when it first took office, but not to accede to the EU,
    GönültaÅ? commented, asserting that through these steps, the AK Party
    chiefly aimed at curbing military tutelage in the country with support
    from the EU. GönültaÅ? added that none of the EU countries tolerate
    corruption as the AK Party government does and in none of them are
    courts dominated by the government.

    Cengiz Aktar, a columnist with the Taraf daily, wrote on Tuesday that
    Turkey's bid for EU accession is no longer on the horizon, unless
    there is a political earthquake. `The already existing opposition to
    Turkey's possible EU accession has now skyrocketed with ErdoÄ?an's
    Cologne speech, in which he slammed basic EU values, free speech and
    press freedom and had German Chancellor Angela Merkel booed by the
    crowd, with an extremely self-confident attitude like a third world
    politician,' Aktar commented.

    In his Tuesday column, Milliyet daily's Sami Kohen wrote that the
    results of the EP elections raised a new concern for Turkey and also
    for Turks living in Europe, as it appeared that xenophobic and anti-EU
    integration voices will be raised in the EP.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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