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Turkey Risks EU Negotiations If Cyprus Not Recognised: France

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  • Turkey Risks EU Negotiations If Cyprus Not Recognised: France

    TURKEY RISKS EU NEGOTIATIONS IF CYPRUS NOT RECOGNISED: FRANCE

    Agence France Presse -- English
    November 8, 2006 Wednesday 3:25 PM GMT

    France called Wednesday for the timetable governing Turkey's talks
    to join the European Union to be revised if Ankara does not change
    its defiant stance on the divided island state of Cyprus by the end
    of the year.

    "If by the end of the year Turkey still does not recognise the 25
    (EU) member states, including obviously Cyprus, then it seems to
    me necessary to review the membership timetable for Turkey into
    the European Union," Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy told
    parliament.

    Earlier, the European Commission issued a report warning Turkey
    to meet its obligations, in particular toward Cyprus, or else its
    "overall progress" in EU membership talks would be affected.

    The report said there was no resolution in sight over Cyprus, which
    is divided between an internationally-recognised Greek Cypriot
    administration in the south and a northern self-declared statelet
    under Turkish patronage.

    Although Turkey is keen to join the European Union, it has not modified
    its stance on Cyprus, which it invaded in 1974 in response to a Greek
    Cypriot coup aimed at uniting the island with Greece.

    "Today, it has to be noted that Turkey still does not accept opening
    its ports and airports to ships and planes, not only (southern)
    Cypriot ones, but also those that come from (southern) Cyprus. It
    is therefore evident today that Turkey is not responding to its
    obligations," Douste-Blazy said.

    The minister said current EU president Finland was doing everything
    to resolve that and other outstanding issues with Turkey by the end
    of the year.

    But he stressed that the European Commission report said that Turkey's
    EU negotiations were "accumulating delays" because of Ankara's lagging
    reform in the areas of freedom of expression, religious freedom and
    minority rights.

    Although French President Jacques Chirac has said he was in favour
    of Turkey one day joining the European Union, relations with France
    and Turkey have frequently been strained over the issue.

    In the latest row, Turkey last month expressed fury at a French
    parliamentary bill which would make it a crime in France to deny that
    the World War I massacre of Armenians by Ottoman Turks constituted
    genocide.
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