Category: EU Members

European Council decided to open accession negotiations with Turkey on 17 Dec. 2004

  • Ankara’s closer ties with Muslim countries ‘EU compatible’

    Ankara’s closer ties with Muslim countries ‘EU compatible’

    VALENTINA POP

    Today @ 10:15 CET

    EUOBSERVER / ANKARA – EU accession remains Turkey’s main priority after a cabinet reshuffle, with the country’s new policy of forging stronger ties with Muslim neighbours seen as EU compatible despite concerns from the secularist oppposition.

    “In my term the first priority of our foreign policy will continue to be the EU,” Turkish foreign minister Ahmet Davutoglu told a group of EU journalists in Ankara on Friday.

    Only ten days in office, after a cabinet reshuffle which saw his predecessor, Ali Babacan, take over the position of minister of economy, he dwelled on the “multidimensional” identity of Turkey – European but majority Muslim, neighbouring the Middle East, the Caucasus, the Mediterranean and the Black Sea – and said no Turkish leader could ignore any of these parts.

    In the eyes of the opposition, this shift marks a departure from the traditional secularist view that Turkey is a different culture, but part of the same Western civilisation as Europe. Common military exercises with Syria, for instance, have risen concerns in Israel, a long-time ally of Ankara.

    Mr Davutoglu, an influential conservative scholar and former advisor to the premier, was instrumental in Ankara’s strong opposition in approving Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen as future Nato secretary-general. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoga cited concerns in the Muslim world over the way the Danish politician managed the cartoon crisis, but was eventually convinced by US President Barack Obama.

    “Our purpose was not to defend the Muslim world against Nato, but trying to find out a way to prevent any misperception and damage to the image of Nato. We thought only as a Nato member,” he explained, stressing that Ankara would have behaved in the same way if the concerns came from the Chinese or Africans.

    In a bid to explain the nuances of the new foreign policy, Mr Davutoglu said his country could not deny its multiple identity. “In Europe, I am looking for the future of Europe, I am speaking as a European. But if we are members of the Organisation of Islamic Conference, in this organisation of course we will be speaking as a member, for the future of the Muslim world,” Mr Davutoglu said.

    Asked about the relations with Iran, Mr Davutoglu emphasised that there was “mutual respect”, especially since the two countries had not changed their border since 1639. “We know each other, we respect each other. Our policy regarding nuclear issues is clear – nobody can defend nuclear weapons,” he said, while also defending Tehran’s right to peaceful nuclear energy projects.

    Another foreign policy shift that was seen with concern in Israeli circles and by the opposition was the government’s approach towards Hamas.

    “Can you envisage peace without Hamas? Like it or not, they are part of the solution. If we really want a two-state solution, we must allow Hamas to sit at the table,” Turkey’s chief EU negotiator Egemen Bagis told journalists at a separate briefing.

    EU failure fuels Muslim policy

    The ruling AK Party had a “half-hearted European policy” and a preference for Muslim countries because “EU is no successful story in the eyes of the public,” opposition leader Onur Oymen from the secularist Republican People’s Party (CHP) party said.

    Created by the founding father of Turkey’s strong separation between mosque and state – military leader Kemal Ataturk – the CHP suffered a crushing defeat in the 2007 elections that saw the AKP consolidate its power at 46.6 percent of the votes.

    The EU was wrongly backing the “so-called” reforms of the AK Party, he said, restricting the army’s role and allowing Islamic symbols – such as the head scarf – re-enter public life. The image of the army and its defenders has been seriously shaken in the past year with the emergence of a far-reaching trial case dubbed “Ergenekon.”

    Over a hundred people, including former generals, university professors, politicians and journalists have been detained or questioned since July 2008 in connection to this alleged clandestine, ultra-nationalist paramilitary organisation aimed at toppling the AKP government and assassinating prominent figures.

    Allegedly, Ergenekon was the successor or had some members who were initially part of the CIA-backed Counter-Guerilla, the covert organisation established at the beginning of the Cold War to oppose communism and later on fight the Kurdish Workers Party (PKK).

    The case was started at a time when the Constitutional Court was about to give its verdict on whether the AKP was breaching the separation of mosque and state, which would have dissolved the party and thrown most of its leaders, including premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan and President Abdullah Gul, to jail.

    The court in the end did not deem the AKP anti-constitutional, but issued a strong warning and said the AKP was undertaking “anti-secular activities.”

    EU not on citizens’ agenda

    With EU negotiations in the slow lane and being kicked around in “domestic politics football”, Turkish citizens seemed rather unimpressed by the whole process, the head of EU commission’s delegation to Ankara, Marc Pierini, said.

    “The EU agenda is not a Turkish citizens’ agenda. The aquis communautaire is about better air, safer food, equal rights. But here, there is a very strong political awareness of the citizens, even in villages, they are very educated politically. The drive towards accession is less strong,” he said.

    In the five years since opening negotiations, Ankara and Brussels have finalised only one accession chapter of a total of 35, while eight remain blocked due to the ongoing dispute about Northern Cyprus. Additionally, Cyprus is now blocking the opening of the energy chapter, the only country to do so in the EU’s Council of Ministers – representing the member states.

    Ankara does not recognise EU member state Cyprus, who for its part has failed to reconcile with the northern part of the island, rejecting a UN-brokered deal that the Northern Cypriots had approved in a referendum.

    Northern Cyprus is not part of the EU and only recognised by Turkey, which invaded this part of the island in 1973 in order to prevent its annexation to Greece.

    Turkey refuses to open its airports and ports to Greek Cypriot traffic until the issue is solved.

    https://euobserver.com/eu-political/28097

  • The Gülen Movement

    The Gülen Movement

    fetullah1Muslims between Tradition and Modernity

    The University of Potsdam’s Institute of Religion and FID BERLIN e.V.
    (Forum for Intercultural Dialogue Berlin) in cooperation with the German
    Orient-Insitute, the Abraham Geiger College at the University of
    Potsdam and the Protestant Academy Berlin are organizing an international
    conference entitled “Muslims between Tradition and Modernity – The Gülen Movement as a Bridge Between Cultures.”

    The aim of the conference is to examine the activities of the Gulen
    Movement objectively and rigorously. Therefore, national and international
    scholars will present their opinions on various aspects of the movement during conference sessions.

    Schedule of the conference:

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    Registration:

  • ‘Italy wants to expand investment in Turkey’

    ‘Italy wants to expand investment in Turkey’

    moz screenshot 16Italian Ambassador Carlo Marsili said on Friday that Italy wants to expand its investments, currently concentrated in the western parts of Turkey, to the entirety of the country.

    Marsili told reporters in Adana that economic relations between the two countries have gradually strengthened, noting that the number of Italian companies operating in Turkey has reached 700. He said Italian investment in Turkey amounted to $5 billion, while the trade volume between the two countries exceeded $19 billion.

    Marsili said Italian companies in Turkey operated primarily in the industrial sector as well as in cement, banking and small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). Marsili said they wanted to expand Italian investment, which is concentrated in the west of the country, to other parts of Turkey, noting that they were making assessments on cities such as Adana, Gaziantep, Konya and Kayseri.

    Meanwhile, British mobile phone giant Vodafone has vowed to increase its investments in Turkey, reiterating its commitment to continuing operations despite a recent plunge in its subscriber numbers in the country. “Our investments in Turkey are long-term and we are looking forward to presenting our 3G products,” Vodafone CEO Vittorio Colao said in a written statement on Friday. He added that the company would allocate half of its 2009 revenues to investments.

    Source:  www.todayszaman.com, 09 May 2009

  • Turkey plays politics with EU pipeline scheme

    Turkey plays politics with EU pipeline scheme

    ANDREW RETTMAN AND VALENTINA POP

    08.05.2009 @ 17:04 CET

    Turkey’s Abdullah Gul (r) meets Czech leader Topolanek in Prague (Photo: eu2009.cz)

    EUOBSERVER / PRAGUE – The EU risks continued energy dependency on Russia and a sharp rise in natural gas prices unless it unblocks EU accession talks with Turkey, Ankara indicated on Friday (8 May).

    At an energy summit in Prague, Turkish President Abdullah Gul signed a declaration promising to close an inter-governmental agreement (IGA) in June on building the Nabucco gas pipeline through his country.

    But he linked the IGA deal to the EU’s opening the energy chapter of Turkey’s accession negotiations, blocked by Cyprus due to a long-standing territorial dispute.

    “In order to be more successful, it is of great importance that co-operation and solidarity exist on both sides,” Mr Gul said. “We believe the opening of the negotiations on the energy chapter will accordingly provide great benefits.”

    The Nabucco pipeline, which cannot go ahead without the IGA, is a project to pump by 2020 25 billion cubic metres (bcm) a year of Caspian Sea basin gas directly to the EU, bypassing Russia.

    The pipeline would reduce the impact on the EU of any future Russian gas cut-offs and complicate Russian plans to put gas prices on a higher footing for the long-term.

    European Commission head Jose Manuel Barroso in Prague on Thursday downplayed Turkey’s Nabucco-accession link. “He [Mr Gul] did not make any kind of conditionality,” the commission president said.

    The commission’s ambassador to Turkey, Marc Pierini, speaking to press in Ankara the same day, was less diplomatic, however.

    “Turkey is not formally linking Nabucco to Cyprus blocking the energy chapter in the Council [the EU member states’ secretariat], but it is part of their understanding of the issue,” he said. “It is a political play within the Council.”

    Ankara’s negotiating position is weakened by the fact it needs extra Caspian gas as much as the EU, the Paris-based International Energy Agency (IEA) told EUobserver.

    “It’s own gas use is growing. It consumed 16 bcm in 2002 and 37 bcm in 2008,” the IEA’s Ian Cronshaw said. “Sixty three percent of its gas comes from Russia and they got cut off in the Ukrainian crisis as well,” he added, referring to January’s Russia-Ukraine gas crunch.

    Turkmenistan disappoints

    In a second niggle at the Prague summit, world number four gas owner Turkmenistan did not sign the EU declaration pledging future gas volumes for Nabucco.

    Turkmenistan sent its number two official, Tachberdy Tagiev, to Prague, and two days before the summit released a political prisoner, Mukhametkuli Aymuradov, auguring well for EU relations. But it did not put pen to paper on the day.

    “Azerbaijan [which did sign] is a European country which has European aspirations. Turkmenistan is a Central Asian country that doesn’t have such aspirations, so that’s where I would look for the reason,” Czech Prime Minister Mirek Topolanek said.

    The political question marks hanging over Nabucco and other pipelines in the “Southern Corridor” region are preventing EU energy companies, such as Germany’s RWE, from moving ahead with contracts.

    “What is very helpful is a unified political signal supporting the idea of a Southern Corridor in general,” RWE spokesman Michael Rosen told this website.

    https://euobserver.com/world/28095

  • Germany meets Turkey – A Forum for Young Leaders

    Germany meets Turkey – A Forum for Young Leaders

    gmt 08The Institute for Cultural Diplomacy (ICD), the Robert Bosch Foundation, and the Istanbul Policy Center are pleased to announce that they are now taking applications for this year’s round of the Germany Meets Turkey – A Forum for Young Leaders (GMT) program. Six Turkish and six German participants will be selected and together with an already established group of twelve young leaders, they will take part in a week-long exchange to Germany in the beginning of September 2009. In 2010 the twelve new participants will return for a one-week exchange to Turkey and in doing so they will join another newly selected group of twelve young leaders.

    We welcome applications from young leaders between the ages of 28 and 38 from all fields, including business, politics, science, education, culture and media, and who are interested in building a sustainable interdisciplinary network as the basis for a solid, long-term relationship between the two countries.
    Participation in the program is free of charge. Accepted participants, however, will be responsible for travel expenses and travel organization to and from the study tour. Despite this, ICD, IPC, and Robert Bosch Foundation are proud to be able to have a “need-blind” admissions policy, meaning that all applications will be judged equally, independent from the financial situation of the applicant. Upon acceptance to the program, applicants may request financial assistance on an individual basis.

    Applications must be submitted no later than May 31, 2009.

    To retrieve the necessary application documents please visit :

  • ITALIAN AMBASSADOR: ITALY STRONGLY SUPPORTS TURKEY’S EU MEMBERSHIP PROCESS

    ITALIAN AMBASSADOR: ITALY STRONGLY SUPPORTS TURKEY’S EU MEMBERSHIP PROCESS

    ANKARA (A.A) – 04.05.2009 – Italian Ambassador in Ankara Carlo Marsili said on Monday that his country extended strong support to Turkey’s EU membership process. Speaking at a conference in Ankara, Marsili said that Turkey’s face always turned towards western world.

    Noting that EU membership process was difficult, Marsili stressed that the target of Turkey was full membership to the EU.

    Marsili said that if Turkey met all the conditions asked by the EU in the end of membership negotiations, then there would not be any obstacle before Turkey’s membership.

    He noted that Turkey should speed up membership process and fulfill the reforms within that scope.

    Expressing belief that there would be a “successful marriage” between Turkey and the EU, Marsili said that he believed the artificial obstacles before the membership negotiations would be eliminated.

    Marsili said that relations with Cyprus and Greece were influential issues in Turkey’s negotiation process, adding that insolubility of Cyprus issue damaged Turkey’s EU membership process.

    Noting that they did not want the EU to be a Christian club, Marsili said that objecting Turkey on the grounds that it was a Muslim country was not appropriate to the founding values of the EU.

    Marsili said that Turkey, in all aspects, was a European country, and it was important as a secular and democratic country.

    Noting that Turkey had one of the most dynamic economies of Europe, Marsili pointed out the economic growth of Turkey despite the global economic crisis. (GC-AÖ)

    Source: haber.turk.net, 04/05/2009