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German Chancellor Repeats Turkey Not Suitable For Full EU Membership

GERMAN CHANCELLOR REPEATS TURKEY NOT SUITABLE FOR FULL EU MEMBERSHIP

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
30.03.2010 12:57 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ German Chancellor Angela Merkel has repeated her
belief that Turkey is not suitable for full EU membership, on the
first day of an official Turkish visit.

She said Turkey should not view her offer of a "privileged partnership"
– rather than full membership – negatively.

Turkey, which began negotiations to become a member in 2005, has
dismissed that offer as an insult.

There were also disagreements over Iran, Cyprus and educating Turkish
children in Germany in Turkish.

Germany is Turkey’s biggest trading partner, its biggest foreign
investor, its biggest source of tourist revenue, and nearly three
million Turks live in Germany.

For two countries with such deep-rooted historical and economic ties,
Germany and Turkey struggled to find a common voice during Mrs.

Merkel’s visit. On every important issue, Chancellor Merkel and
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan seemed to be at odds with
each other.

After months of avoiding the subject, Chancellor Merkel chose
this moment to revive her idea of offering Turkey what she calls a
privileged partnership with the EU, rather than full membership. Mrs.

Merkel has stressed that she does see integration as possible in up
to 28 of the 35 so-called chapters of EU law with which Turkey has
to comply before it can become a full member of the union.

Speaking at a joint press conference in Ankara, she said that the rules
of the game have changed since 2005. "The (accession) negotiations are
an open-ended process. We should now pursue this open-ended process,"
she said.

Mr. Erdogan said nothing – but has in the past expressed his outrage
over what he calls "shifting the goalposts".

The German proposal has been firmly rejected by the Turkish government
as a breach of the terms agreed when membership negotiations began
five years ago.

"Such a thing as privileged partnership does not exist," said Egemen
Bagis, Turkey’s Minister for European Affairs.

"So we do not take that option seriously because there is no legal
foundation of it. At times I feel insulted for being offered something
which does not exist."

Turkey’s sometimes fraught relationship with the European Union will
not be helped by this visit.

On Iran, Mrs. Merkel wants Turkish support for international sanctions,
which Mr. Erdogan argues are counter-productive and hypocritical.

Turkey has recently strengthened its relations with Iran and opposes
the tougher sanctions threatened by Western governments.

"We are of the view that sanctions is not a healthy path and… that
the best route is diplomacy," Mr. Erdogan said at the joint news
conference.

The two leaders also disagreed about Cyprus, with the German chancellor
calling for the issue of Turkey’s refusal to recognize the government
on the divided island to be resolved quickly, BBC reported.

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