Turkey is part of the solution, not of the problem, says its EU minister

Published: 4 December 2009 y., Friday

Turkijos vėliava
Turkey's progress this year on the path to EU accession was debated by its EU affairs minister and chief negotiator Egemen Bağış and Foreign Affairs Committee MEPs on 2 December. His visit coincided with the committee's first discussion of a draft report on Turkey by Ria Oomen-Ruijten (EPP, NL).

Given the challenges that the EU faces - such as energy security, climate change, and economic crisis - "Turkey is committed to contribute to the solutions and is not part of the problem", Turkish Minister for EU Affairs and Chief Negotiator Egemen Bağış told the Foreign Affairs Committee.

Mr Bağış reaffirmed Turkey's determination to pursue the EU accession process, as demonstrated by its 4-year national reform programme, despite the fact that negotiations on several issues had been halted by Turkey's failure to apply to Cyprus the Additional Protocol to the Ankara Agreement. 

Copenhagen criteria

EP rapporteur on Turkey Ria Oomen-Ruijten (EPP, NL) stressed that even though Turkey had passed laws relevant to the Copenhagen political criteria, it was still doing too little to implement them, particularly in the areas of women's rights and non-discrimination. She also asked what Turkey would do to enable the ratification of the protocol with Armenia, to which Mr Bağış replied that "Turkey wants to move forwards and have good relations with all its neighbours".

Asked by Alexander Graf Lambsdorff (ALDE, DE) when Turkey will achieve a breakthrough on constitutional reform, Mr Bağış replied "because 2010 will be a year without elections in Turkey, the government will try to reach a consensus with the opposition in order to enable the constitutional reform".

Bilateral issues

"How can Turkey continue to move towards the EU if it does not solve its bilateral issues?" asked Marietta Giannakou (EPP, EL), in a reference to Cyprus. "Why are you maintaining the status quo on occupation of Cyprus?" asked Takis Hadjigeorgiou (GUE/NGL, CY). "Regarding Cyprus, it takes two to tango" replied Mr Bağış, adding that "the final solution must be based on equality".

Maria Eleni Koppa (S&D, EL) criticised Turkey's violation of Greek air space in the Aegean sea. "We need to start exploratory talks to define air space", replied Mr Bağış.

Readmission agreement

"Illegal immigration is not just a Greek and Turkish issue, but a European one" and the EU-Turkey Readmission Agreement must be concluded on the principle of "common burden sharing", said Mr Bağış in reply to questions from several MEPs. For several decades, Turkish goods have been able to move freely within the EU, whereas Turkish citizens cannot, he added.

Religious minority rights

Commenting on debate over the Swiss referendum decision to ban the building of minarets and the problems still faced by religious minorities in Turkey, Mr Bağış said that "Turkey is a place of co-existence and has a history of more than 800 years in which different cultures live together."

Afghanistan

Replying to a question from Geoffrey Van Orden (ECR, UK) as to whether Turkey intends to reinforce its troops in Afghanistan, Mr Bağış noted that for the third time, his country was leading the International Security Assistance Force command and "if all members of NATO decide to increase participation, Turkey will not differ on that."

Iran

Elmar Brok (EPP, DE) asked about developments in Iran and Turkey's possible involvement in exporting nuclear materials. Mr  Mr Bağış stressed the importance if dialogue with Iran, adding that "if Iran had nuclear weapons we would be more worried then you are." 

Šaltinis: europa.eu
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