Category: EU Members

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

  • Dispute Heats Up between Germany and Turkey over Contested Artifacts

    Dispute Heats Up between Germany and Turkey over Contested Artifacts

    German museums and archaeologists fear that Turkey is punishing them for not repatriating contested artifacts. In a SPIEGEL interview, Turkish Culture Minister Ömer Çelik explains why Turkey is demanding both the artifacts and an apology.

    A dispute is heating up between Turkey and Western countries, with ancient artifacts at stake. On one side, Ankara vehemently insists museums, including German ones, should return valuable archaeological treasures that Turkey alleges are wrongly in their possession. German archaeologists, on the other hand, refuse categorically to comply, saying the disputed items entered German collections legally, most of them over a century ago.

    Pergamonaltar für drei Jahre nicht öffentlich zu sehen

    This battle over antiquities is affecting relations between the two countries. High-ranking officials at major museums in Berlin say the Turkish government has broken agreements concerning cooperation between the countries and is deliberately making it harder for German archaeologists to work in Turkey. The latter are worried that, in 2013, they may for the first time be denied coveted excavation permits.

    Speaking with SPIEGEL last year, Hermann Parzinger, president of the Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation, which oversees the state-owned museums in Berlin, harshly criticized the Turkish government. “Much is being lost because Turkey doesn’t have an established system for preserving historical artifacts, as Germany does,” Parzinger said. He also accused Ankara of increasing arrogance, saying that cultural heritage “is the last thing they think about.”

    Parzinger’s comments provoked outrage in Turkey. “His message is: ‘They have no idea what they’re doing and don’t take care of things, so we’ll take care of them instead for the sake of the common good,’” raged the Turkish daily Hürriyet.

    Now Turkish Culture and Tourism Minister Ömer Çelik, 44, responds in a SPIEGEL interview to Parzinger’s criticism. Çelik took office in January and is seen as a close confidant of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan of the Justice and Development Party (AKP), the country’s conservative, Islamic governing party. Just as his predecessor did, Çelik is calling for the return of archaeological artifacts originating in Turkey. The objects would find a new home in Ankara’s Museum of the Civilizations. Planned as the world’s largest museum building, this facility is to open its doors in 2023, on the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Turkish state.

    SPIEGEL: Minister Çelik, during your recent trip to Berlin, you visited the Pergamon Altar, one of the main attractions at the city’s Museum Island. Do you believe the altar belongs here in Berlin or in Turkey, where it was discovered by German archaeologist Carl Humann in the 19th century?

    Çelik: The Pergamon Altar is an important piece of our global cultural heritage. As a matter of principle, it’s preferable that cultural artifacts be displayed in the place from which they come. International laws concerning the preservation of such cultural treasures stipulate as much

    via Dispute Heats Up between Germany and Turkey over Contested Artifacts – SPIEGEL ONLINE.

    more: http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/dispute-heats-up-between-germany-and-turkey-over-contested-artifacts-a-888398.html

  • Turkey’s EU bid getting back on track

    Turkey’s EU bid getting back on track

    By Alakbar Raufoglu for Southeast European Times — 14/03/13

    TURKEY-FRANCE-EU

    Chief EU negotiator Egemen Bagis at his office in Ankara. Turkey’s quest for EU membership has picked up steam recently. [AFP]

    Turkey’s stalled EU candidacy has picked up steam in recent weeks as senior European leaders called for a fresh push for negotiations, drawing positive responses from Ankara.

    Turkey began accession talks with the EU in 2005, but progress has stalled. Only 13 of 35 negotiating chapters have been opened, with one completed successfully. No new ones have been opened since 2010. The chapters are areas of policy that Turkey and the EU need to agree on in order for Turkey to become a member.

    French President Francois Hollande said last month he was prepared to open talks on the chapter related to EU support for regions within the bloc. His Socialist Party has been more supportive of Turkey’s membership bid than its predecessor.

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel also backed fresh talks with Turkey to boost its candidacy, stopping short of endorsing full membership.

    “In recent times, negotiations stalled somewhat and I am in favor of opening a new chapter in order to move forward,” Merkel stated in advance of her recent trip to Turkey.

    Meanwhile, the draft of Chapter 22 on Regional Policy and Coordination of Structural Instruments has been unofficially sent to EU authorities, according to Egemen Bagis, Turkey’s minister of EU and chief negotiator.

    “We are now waiting for the member countries to evaluate it,” state-run Anatolian news Agency quoted Bagis as saying last week.

    Abdulkadir Emin Onen, AKP Sanliurfa deputy and the party’s vice chairman for foreign affairs, said the recent statements by France and Germany were “promising.”

    “Obviously, we hope and expect the latest statements to have a positive impact on accession negotiations and that not only one, but all the remaining [blocks on the] chapters to come to an end in the near future,” he told SETimes, adding that Ankara’s target remains “full membership.”

    Amanda Paul, a Turkey analyst at the Brussels-based European Policy Centre, said a revival in negotiations could strengthen democracy in Turkey.

    The deadlock “created a very negative climate” between Ankara and the EU, she said.

    “It impacted the reform efforts in Turkey, which slowed and in some cases, [such as] freedom of expression, started to go backwards,” Paul told SETimes.

    She added: “Therefore, the decision of the French president to unblock a chapter is to be welcomed, as [is] the positive message of Angela Merkel.”

    Kader Sevinc, the CHP’s representative to the EU, told SETimes Brussels “has long been failing to act with strategic vision on Turkey, losing its power of influencing positively Turkey’s democratic reforms and social development.”

    As a result, added Sevinc, the Turkish government “has become increasingly authoritarian, exercising pressure on the media, academia, civil society and the judiciary.”

    Closer Turkey-EU engagement on democratic standards “would be good news for Turkey’s social democrats and progressive forces represented by the CHP,” Sevinc said.

    Deputy Foreign Minister Naci Kuru defended his government’s record on democratisation in a recent speech in Istanbul.

    “Naturally, we still have a lot to do to fully meet the democratic aspirations of our people, but there is no doubt that today Turkish democracy serves as a source of inspiration to the wider area surrounding it,” Kuru said, according to media reports.

    Analysts were quick to temper the optimism created by the recent movement on Turkey’s EU bid. Challenges remain, they said, citing the unresolved status of Cyprus, European opposition to Turkish membership on non-political grounds, and fading public support for the process in Turkey.

    For Paul, what happens next will help clarify whether the EU is serious about “a new beginning with Turkey” or not.

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    “If this is a case of the EU simply trying to put new wine in an old bottle, then this reset may not last long,” Paul told SETimes.

    She added that Brussels “needs to develop a genuine long term strategy towards Turkey, not come up with short term solutions for a long term problem which further risks damaging a relationship of significance importance to the EU.”

    Swedish Ambassador to Turkey Hakan Akesson said last week that democracy, human rights and superiority of law are “common values of the member countries of the EU and should not be correlated to religion.”

    Turkey, he stated in an interview with the Turkish press, “is very close to becoming a member of the EU as it is both financially and economically important for the EU.”

    This content was commissioned for SETimes.com.

    via Turkey’s EU bid getting back on track (SETimes.com).

  • Romania vows to support Turkey’s EU membership

    Romania vows to support Turkey’s EU membership

    ANKARA, March 14 (Xinhua) — Visiting Romanian Foreign Minister Titus Corlatean on Thursday expressed his country’s support for Turkey’s membership in the European Union (EU).

    Speaking at a joint press conference with his Turkish counterpart Ahmet Davutoglu in the Turkish capital of Ankara, Corlatean said Romania supported Turkey’s EU process.

    He said “Romania supports the opening of chapters in Turkey’s EU accession process. Because, we believe this would create a win- win situation for both Turkey and the EU member states.”

    Turkey’s growing clout in the region, both economically and politically, may have given a boost to Turkey’s membership bid. Most EU member states support Turkish membership, while the other few led by Germany and France are finding it increasingly difficult to make their case against Turkey.

    The 27-member bloc’s highest decision-making body, the EU Council, reiterated last December the bloc’s commitment to active accession negotiations with Turkey, while calling for a new momentum in these negotiations, which was interpreted as an indication that France and Germany increasingly find themselves isolated in the bloc in their opposition to Turkish membership.

    During her visit to Turkey last month, German Chancellor Angela Merkel pressed Ankara to open its ports and airports to ships and planes from Cyprus, while expressing her support for reviving the stalled accession talks between Turkey and the EU.

    Turkey opened accession talks with the EU in 2005 but has only been able to finish talks on one of the 35 chapters that a candidate country has to complete before joining the bloc. No chapter has been opened for talks for the past two and a half years.

    via Romania vows to support Turkey’s EU membership — Shanghai Daily | 上海日报 — English Window to China New.

  • Nuke Program? Turkey’s Got  an App for That

    Nuke Program? Turkey’s Got an App for That

    Reports: Germans accuse Turkey of exporting items with ‘nuclear applications’ to Iran

    Mahmoud Ahmadinejad / AP

    BY: Adam Kredo

    German prosecutors have accused Turkey of exporting to Iran nearly 1,000 items with “nuclear applications,” according to German and Turkish media reports.

    German prosecutors allege Iran has established multiple “front companies” in Istanbul, accordingto Today’s Zaman, an English-language publication in Turkey. These illicit companies are believed to have shipped nuclear-related material back to Iran.

    Kristen Silverberg, a former U.S. Ambassador to the European Union, said Iran has a history of using front companies as a means to skirt sanctions.

    “The Iranian regime has a long practice of using front companies” to evade sanctions and conduct illicit business affairs, Silverberg, who serves as president of United Against Nuclear Iran, a non-partisan advocacy group, told the Washington Free Beacon.

    Iran has “really perfected the art of sanctions evasion, and we’ve seen them do that in response to every round [of sanctions], which is why it’s so important for the U.S. and its allies to identify the front companies and continue to sanction them and any country abetting them,” Silverberg said.

    News of the nuclear exports comes just days after German and Turkish officials busted several Iranian smugglers suspected of transferring nuclear goods from India to Iran.

    German and Turkish officials conducted raids in each country on Monday, capturing several Iranian suspects. Three other suspects remain at large.

    “In 2012 German police detected that materials with nuclear applications obtained in Germany and India were transported to the Mitech company in Iran through Turkey by an Iranian national, Hossein Tanideh,” Today’s Zaman quoted the German report as saying.

    Tanideh was captured in Turkey earlier this year.

    “Germany’s Federal Criminal Police Office, which is also the German branch of Interpol, informed its counterpart in Turkey about Tanideh’s dealings, and Tanideh was arrested,” according to the report.

    German officials were reportedly able to trace Tanideh’s activities to back several of the Iranian front companies.

    The investigation revealed that Tanideh was tied to several business owners who were exporting material to Iran.

    “As part of the investigation, a thorough search was conducted at IDI, a foreign trade company owned by Tanideh,” Today’s Zaman reported. “Police raided the main office of the company in Bakırköy, İstanbul, and seized all the documents in the office.”

    The seized documents showed that Tanideh and one of his business associates “sent the materials with nuclear applications they got from Germany and India to Mitech in Iran and declared them as plumbing parts and fixtures,” according to the report.

    Turkish police are believed to have learned from these documents that 91 nuclear-related items were funneled from Germany to Turkey on multiple occasions before making their way to Iran.

    Another 856 nuclear items were shipped from India to Turkey and then to Iran at various points, according to the report.

    “Despite six years of sanctions Iran is still capable of procuring critically vital, made-in-Europe dual use technology for its nuclear weapons’ program,” said Emanuele Ottolenghi, a Germany-based senior fellow for the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.

    “Dozens of front companies still operate in Europe under the nose of local authorities,” he said. “The mushrooming of Iranian companies in Turkey is clearly related—obtaining export licenses to this NATO member state is relatively easy.”

    By using Turkey as a conduit, “Iran is able to elude sanctions,” Ottolenghi explained. “European authorities must do much more to stop this traffic and demand much more vigilance from Turkey since, by now, there are more than 3,000 Iranian companies registered in Turkey.”

    Iran sanctions experts questioned whether Turkish officials had quietly allowed these shipments to take place.

    “The big question is: Did Ankara know about this procurement network before the Germans blew the lid off?” said Jonathan Schanzer, a former terrorism finance analyst at the U.S. Treasury Department.

    Iran and Turkey continue to expand business ties.

    “A good number of Iranian-financed firms have set up shop in Turkey recently,” Today’s Zaman reported. “In January this year, there were 28 Iranian-funded foreign companies established in Turkey, which ranked just behind German investors.”

    Turkey has been implemented in a series of troublesome actions meant to skirt Western sanctions on Iran.

    Turkey’s Halkbank, a majority state-owned lender, faced scrutiny for carrying out so-called “gold for oil” transactions with Iran. It is believed that Turkey traded more than 60 tons of gold in exchange for Iranian crude oil.

    Regional reports have also indicated that Turkey may trade ships to Iran in exchange for oil in another scheme meant to skirt Western sanctions.

    Turkey has also been suspected of funding the terror group Hamas, leading experts to wonder if the nuclear-export fiasco reveals a growing terrorism problem in Turkey.

    These exports, “coupled with Halkbank’s gas for gold scheme, coupled with Hamas funding, coupled with Turkey’s failure for five years to comply with international standards for terror finance laws paints a very troubling picture of Turkey,” said Schanzer, who serves as vice president of research at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.

    Former Pentagon adviser Michael Rubin said these front companies appear legitimate but are actually tools of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC).

    “The economic wing of the Revolutionary Guards runs a number of front companies for seemingly legitimate purposes,” Rubin said. “The Iranians can use these companies’ Turkish partners to access a lot of dual use technology that Iran could never import directly. That’s hard enough to keep track of under normal circumstances, but we’re saddled with a Turkish government that sees Obama’s professed friendship as evidence that they can literally get away with murder.”

    This entry was posted in Middle East, National Security and tagged Germany, Hossein Tanideh, Jonathan Schanzer, Nuclear Iran, Today’s Zaman, Turkey. Bookmark thepermalink.
  • Turkey responds to Greece’s note verbale to UN by issuing its own

    Turkey responds to Greece’s note verbale to UN by issuing its own

    Turkey has forwarded a note verbale to the United Nations in response to a Greek one sent to the international organization on February 20, the Greek Foreign Ministry announced late on Tuesday.

    samaraserdoganshake

    According to the Greek Foreign Ministry, the Turkish verbal note challenges the right of the Greek islands to a continental shelf and exclusive economic zone, in violation of article 121 of the Convention on the Law of the Sea.

    Athens had submitted a verbal note to the UN notifying international officials of Turkey’s granting of exploration permits for areas deemed to cover the Greek continental shelf.

    At the time Turkey’s Foreign Ministry had issued a statement defending its decision, noting that the permits that had been issued since 2007 to the state-owned oil company TRAO concerned territories within boundaries of the Turkish continental shelf in the Eastern Mediterranean.

    In separate interviews published in Sunday’s Kathimerini on March 10, Greek Foreign Minister Dimitris Avramopoulos and his Turkish counterpart Ahmet Davutoglu said they were hopeful the two countries could resolve their differences in the Aegean Sea, though through different routes.

    While Greece is using international law as a guideline for the development of an exclusive economic zone (EEZ), Turkey would like to see a bilateral agreement.

    Both ministers were speaking following a Greek-Turkish High-Level Cooperation Council held in Istanbul earlier this month, during which Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras met with Turkish premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

    via ekathimerini.com | Turkey responds to Greece’s note verbale to UN by issuing its own.

  • Greek Fugitives Caught In Turkey

    Greek Fugitives Caught In Turkey

    Yunanistan’dan Türkiye’ye kaçanlar için kendi Frontex’imizi kuralım ve duvar örelim!

    shutterstock_37917877Three of seven inmates who escaped from a Greek prison were captured after crossing into Turkey by swimming across a river, Today’s Zaman, Turkish newspaper reported, and will be sent back to Greece.

    The inmates got out through a window and jumped over a fences. Police identified the prisoners as three foreign nationals from Iraq and one each from Algeria, Egypt, Syria and Turkey. Six had been jailed for trafficking in illegal migrants and one for a drug-related offense.

    Greek police handed out the identity information, photos and escape routes of the fugitives to the Edirne Police Department. The fugitives who were caught didn’t realize they were entering a restricted military zone and were immediately captured by Turkish border guards.

    The report identified the captured fugitives as Algerian Ahmad Massoud, Egyptian Fahmy Alla al-Din and Iraqi Abdulkarim Marwan. They will be delivered to the Greek authorities as part of a 2001 re-admission agreement between Turkey and Greece.

    via Greek Fugitives Caught In Turkey | Greek Reporter Europe.