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Turkish Media Reflect EU Uncertainty, Remain Defiant

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  • Turkish Media Reflect EU Uncertainty, Remain Defiant

    TURKISH MEDIA REFLECT EU UNCERTAINTY, REMAIN DEFIANT

    Agence France Presse -- English
    October 3, 2005 Monday 7:21 AM GMT

    Turkish newspapers Monday reflected the uncertainty in Luxembourg
    over whether landmark membership talks with the European Union would
    get under way or not, while remaining defiant against Turkey's EU
    opponents.

    Frontpage headlines varied from "Today is Day One" in Hurriyet to
    "Vienna's Hate" in Sabah to "What a Bore" in Vatan.

    "Turkey has brought two Europes face to face," commented Vatan. "A
    Europe that looks to a future of absolute peace by ending religious
    disparity and conflict, and a Europe that seeks to preserve its
    religious identity with xenophobia and racist, nationalistic
    fundamentalism."

    A columnist in Sabah said Turks have been considered a part of Europe
    since Ottoman times and continue to be so despite detractors "whose
    names do not appear even in the footnotes of history."

    "Ten years from now ... the same fate will doubtless await (Wolfgang)
    Schuessel, (Angela) Merkel and (Nicolas) Sarkozy," he wrote, referring
    to the Austrian chancellor, the Christian-Democrat German leader and
    the French ruling party chairman, all strongly opposed to Turkey's
    EU bid.

    Gazi Ercel, a former Central Bank governor turned columnist, wrote
    in the same paper that Turkey and the EU are headed for "a shotgun
    wedding".

    "It is certain that life for couples who dislike each other can be
    hell," he wrote.

    "But Turkey's field of action is not as wide as it seems ... and
    Europe, with this forced marriage, will pay the price of Turkey's
    growing geostrategic importance."

    A commentator in the liberal Milliyet blamed the government for being
    unprepared for the start of the talks, and of "travelling to Europe
    on a second-class ticket."

    But a former social-democrat cabinet minister warned in the liberal
    Radikal, "don't confuse our shortcomings with the rudeness of EU
    politicians."

    An editorialist for the pro-government Yeni Safak said Turkey must
    pursue the talks "in spite of the French, who are the Armenians'
    sponsors; the German Christian Democrats, weaned on religious
    separatism; the Austrians, who cannot rid themselves of the Siege of
    Vienna syndrome; and the Greek Cypriots who, with their population
    of 600,000, are spoiled enough to single-heandedly block the
    decision-making mechanisms of the Union".

    A columnist in the English-language Turkish Daily News summed up
    the general mood: "Turkey without Europe can flourish," she wrote,
    "but Europe without Turkey cannot".
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