Spanish Foreign Minister hopes for acceleration of Turkey-EU
negotiation process
10.01.2010 17:44 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Foreign Minister of Spain, which recently assumed EU
chairmanship, expressed hope for acceleration of Turkey-EU negotiation
process. As Miguel Angel Moratinos stated, during Spain’s 6-month EU
chairmanship, 35 negotiation sections will, hopefully, be discussed.
At present, 12 sections, some of them covering environmental issues,
are open for negotiations. Yet only one of the issues opened has been
solved as of today.
Moratinos cited Cyprus issue as the main problem in talks with Turkey
and expressed hope for the further progress in issue-related
negotiations, TRT Russian reported.
The European Union (EU) is an economic and political union of 27
member states, located primarily in Europe. Committed to regional
integration, the EU was established by the Treaty of Maastricht on 1
November 1993 upon the foundations of the European Economic Community.
Turkey’s application to accede to the European Union (previously the
European Communities) was made on 14 April 1987. Turkey has been an
associate member of the European Union (EU) and its predecessors since
1963. After the ten founding members, Turkey was one of the first
countries to become a member of the Council of Europe in 1949, and was
also a founding member of the Organization for Economic Co-operation
and Development (OECD) in 1961 and the Organization for Security and
Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) in 1973. The country has also been an
associate member of the Western European Union since 1992, and is a
part of the "Western Europe" branch of the Western European and Others
Group (WEOG) at the United Nations. Turkey signed a Customs Union
agreement with the EU in 1995 and was officially recognized as a
candidate for full membership on 12 December 1999, at the Helsinki
summit of the European Council. Negotiations were started on 3 October
2005, and the process, should it be in Turkey’s favor, is likely to
take at least a decade to complete. The membership bid has become a
major controversy of the ongoing enlargement of the European Union.