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Europe
Turkey sleepwalking towards crisis with EU
2006-05-30
EFL

ISTANBUL, May 29 (Reuters) - Turkey is sleepwalking towards a potential crisis with the European Union later this year, as electoral politics take precedence over EU-driven reforms in a mood of mutual disenchantment.

Far from accelerating Turkey's march towards membership, the start of entry talks last Oct. 3 seems to have prompted a step back on both sides, with Turks questioning Europe's sincerity, while many Europeans fret about whether they want Turkey at all.

The executive European Commission is set to give Ankara a critical interim report card when Turkish and EU foreign ministers meet on June 12 and negotiations on the first of 35 policy areas begin in earnest.

EU officials say it will point to persistent problems with freedom of expression, religious and minority rights and the role of the military in political life despite past reforms.

"The real problem is that they've halted the reform process," said one EU official involved in the talks, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The trigger for early trouble is Turkey's refusal to open its ports and airports to traffic from Cyprus, as required under a customs union with the 25-nation bloc, extended to cover the 10 new EU members in the so-called Ankara protocol last year.

"We will have some crisis with Turkey in the second half of the year because they haven't solved the Ankara agreement and Cyprus," said a senior EU ambassador in Brussels.

EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn said in an interview with Reuters in March he was working to avoid a "train crash" over Cyprus and urged Ankara to step up the pace of reforms.

Cyprus, which like all EU members has a right of veto over the talks, has warned it will take a tough line on the review.

Yet despite a bout of financial market turbulence, there is no sense in Turkey of a European risk. Indeed the EU accession process that dominated politics for the last four years has almost vanished from the headlines.

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Posted by:ryuge

00:01