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Turkey Appears To Miss Out On Rapid EU Accession

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  • Turkey Appears To Miss Out On Rapid EU Accession

    TURKEY APPEARS TO MISS OUT ON RAPID EU ACCESSION

    Workpermit.com, UK
    Nov 6 2006

    The European Commission will decide this week if it will recommend
    a partial suspension of Turkey's membership negotiations for joining
    the European Union. Turkey has failed in several key areas, including
    failure to open up its ports to Cyprus and other trade issues.

    This, on the heels of a new French law last month that makes it
    illegal to deny that the deaths of 600,000 to 2 million Armenians
    during 1915 - 1917 is genocide. The law equivocates denial with the
    Jewish Holocaust during World War II.

    Turkish law allows severe penalties for persons who refer to the
    event as "genocide," or the equivalent, as being subversive of the
    government of Turkey.

    While this last is a rather dramatic example of differences that must
    be resolved, it is by no means the only one.

    The controversy is complex, with a number of strong arguments in
    favour of Turkish accession as well as a number of equally strong
    arguments against.

    Economic and trade disputes are more likely to have the final word.

    The European Commission President, Jose Manuel Barroso, and Olli Rehn,
    Enlargement Commissioner, are considering a recommendation to suspend
    three negotiating topics closely linked to the ports dispute.

    Other commissioners are urging Brussels to send out a strong message:
    that many more parts of the negotiations will be affected if Ankara
    does not meet the EU's demand. Austria wants the Commission to
    distinguish Turkey's case from that of Croatia, the other country
    currently in EU membership negotiations.

    France, Cyprus, Austria and Greece are all pushing for a tough
    line with Turkey, with the UK championing efforts to keep the talks
    on course.

    "If the issue was just Turkey not opening its ports, that would
    be one thing and you could just suspend three chapters," said an
    EU diplomat. "But remember that the Commission will also report on
    Wednesday that Turkey is not making progress on reforms. This is a
    question of political control of the EU's enlargement process."

    Turkey's prime minister appears ready to amend a controversial
    article of the Turkish penal code that the Commission says inhibits
    free speech. "We are ready for proposals to make article 301 more
    concrete if there are problems stemming from it being vague," he said.

    The Commission debate opens the way for a full-blooded EU dispute over
    Turkey, which some officials fear could bring the entire negotiations
    to a halt.

    On Wednesday the Commission will also adopt a strategy paper for future
    enlargement, which says that, before any new expansion takes place,
    the EU will have to deal with its own institutional arrangements -
    which were to have been decided by the ill-fated European constitution.

    With the expansion of the European Union to the EU-27 on 01 January
    this year, most EU States are ready to take a slower approach,
    with a more structured and restrictive attitude toward new potential
    accession states. Croatia, Turkey and the Ukraine look like they will
    have to meet tougher standards to get a treaty, and then will likely
    face more restriction internally from existing member States as the
    economic changes begin to settle out.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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