Category: EU Members

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

  • Feast of St Paul in Istanbul

    Feast of St Paul in Istanbul

    The Catholic Bishop in Istanbul, Mgr Louis Pelatre, with Malta’s Consul General in Istanbul Reuben Gauci.

    The Consulate General of Malta in Istanbul celebrated the feast of St Paul’s Shipwreck on February 10 at the Franciscan Catholic church of St Anthony of Padua, located in Istiklal Caddesi, a famous avenue in the city of Istanbul.

    Consul General of Malta in Istanbul Reuben Gauci, accompanied by his family, attended Mass at St Anthony of Padua church, which was celebrated by the Catholic Bishop of Istanbul, Mgr Louis Pelatre.

    Mass was also attended by Maltese citizens and people of Maltese descent living in Turkey. A delegation from the AK Party, currently in government in Turkey, was also present.

    After Mass, Mr Gauci invited Beyoglu mayor Ahmet Misbah Demircan to open an exhibition on the veneration of St Paul in Malta. Mr Gauci said St Paul was born in the city of Tarsus, which today can be found in the Turkish Republic. He added that in Malta St Paul was regarded as a spiritual father of faith and that his shipwreck was celebrated with great piety.

    The director of the Franciscan Catholic church of St Anthony, Fr Iulian Pista, OFM Conv., was also among the guests.

    The exhibition will remain open for the next two weeks.

    via Feast of St Paul in Istanbul – timesofmalta.com.

  • France-Turkey student sentenced on terrorism charges

    France-Turkey student sentenced on terrorism charges

    ANKARA: A court in Turkey on Friday sentenced a French-Turkish student to more than five years in prison for “terrorist propaganda” but allowed her to return to France pending an appeal, her lawyer said.

    The lawyer, Inayet Aksu, said the court in the northwestern city of Bursa had sentenced Sevil Sevimli, 21, to five years and two months in prison but freed her until her planned appeal and did not require that she stay in Turkey. She will however have to pay 10,000 Turkish lira (around 4,200 euros, $5,600) in bail before she leaves, Aksu said.

    The exchange student was arrested after joining a May Day parade in Istanbul and went on trial in September on charges that risked up to 32 years in prison. Aksu said that while she was initially accused of belonging to a terrorist organisation, she was only found guilty of disseminating propaganda on behalf of an outlawed group.

    Sevimli, who was detained for three months before her release under court supervision in August, is accused of links to the Revolutionary People’s Liberation Party-Front (DHKP-C). The far-left extremist group is listed as a terrorist organisation by the United States and the European Union. It claimed responsibility for a suicide bombing at the US embassy in Ankara this month that killed a Turkish security guard.

    Since 1976, the DHKP-C has been behind numerous attacks against the Turkish state that have killed dozens. Sevimli has denied the accusations, calling them “ridiculous”. In November, Aksu told the judge, “Her only fault is to come to Turkey as a student with leftist ideas”.

    Born in France to Turkish Kurd parents, Sevimli was completing a final year of studies in Turkey under Erasmus, the inter-European university exchange scheme, at the time of her arrest. Her friends and supporters greeted the news of her imminent return to France, expected Wednesday, with joy.

    “It’s first off a huge relief to know that Sevil can leave Turkish territory,” said the head of her school in France, Jean-Luc Mayaud of Lyon-2 University.

    via France-Turkey student sentenced on terrorism charges – thenews.com.pk.

  • Germany promises Turkey thorough probe into murders

    Germany promises Turkey thorough probe into murders

    German parliamentarians inquiring into a neo-Nazi murder series in Germany have invited senior Turkish officials to monitor a major trial opening in Munich in April. Eight of those murdered were of Turkish origin.

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    A visit to Turkey by the German parliament’s committee of inquiry into ten neo-Nazi murders between 2000 and 2007 has ended also with a pledge by the committee’s chairman Sebastian Edathy that its findings will be published in Turkish as well. And, he said he would ask Munich judges to allow seats to be reserved for top Turkish observers.

    On April 17, Munich’s Higher Regional Court is scheduled to begin the trial of Beate Zschäpe and four other suspects on charges including complicity in anti-foreigner murders. It is likely be one of the largest trials in post-war Germany, with 600 witnesses due to testify.

    Germany reassures Turkey

    The 38-year-old Zschäpe is the sole surviving member of a core neo-Nazi trio that across Germany allegedly murdered nine shop proprietors, including a resident of Greek origin, and subsequently a policewoman.

    Gangland killings were initially blamed but only last year did German police and diverse intelligence agencies admit that they had failed to link the far-right suspects to the murder series. Those failings drew sharp criticism from Turkey, which said trust among millions of residents of Turkish origin in Germany had been shaken. Four senior German security officials also resigned.

    The renewed scrutiny of the murder series had followed the discovery in November 2011 of two other dead members of the self-styled National Socialist Underground (NSU) after their apparent murder-suicide in the eastern German city of Zwickau. The trio had lived hidden since 1998.

    Observer seats reserved for Turkey

    Winding up his committee’s trip in Ankara on Friday, Edathy (pictured above) said he would asked the Munich court to reserve seats at the trial opening for Turkey’s ambassador and the head of the Turkish parliament’s human rights committee, Ayhan Sefer Üstün.

    DW.DE

    German politician ‘sorry’ for missing right-wing evidence

    A German ex-politician has apologized for a botched inquiry following a 2004 terrorist attack in Cologne. The investigative committee said the mistake led police away from discovering a right-wing terror organization. (22.11.2012)

    Dresden protesters block neo-Nazis

    The Turkish committee’s members had also been invited to attend a Berlin hearing of witnesses before his inquiry panel in April, said Edathy who is an interior affairs expert of Germany’s opposition Social Democratic Party (SPD).

    Edathy said Turkish cabinet ministers, including Justice Minister Sadullah Ergin, had been assured by visiting German inquiry members – across all political party lines – that there was no evidence of a cover-up by German authorities in the wake of the NSU murder spree.

    The initial supposition by German authorities that organized crime lay behind the murders was “not professional and not objective,” Edathy added.

    Turkey calls for improvements

    On Thursday, Turkey’s deputy premier, Bekir Bozdag, who oversees the situation of Turks living abroad, said he hoped the German committee’s findings would include suggestions on investigative improvements and not just clarify the murder series.

    Alongside Zschäpe, four other men have been charged with various crimes for allegedly helping the NSU, including Ralf Wohlleben, a formerly prominent far-right party functionary, who is accused of organizing weapons for the trio.

    The prosecution case has been complicated by suggestions that some of the four might have been informers for Germany’s security services at the time of the alleged NSU crimes.

    Next Monday, German President Joachim Gauck is due to meet in Berlin with relatives of the murder victims.

    Steffen Seibert, the main spokesman for Chancellor Angela Merkel, who met relatives early last year, said Merkel would meet them again in May.

    ipj/kms (epd, AFP, dpa, Reuters)

    via Germany promises Turkey thorough probe into murders | News | DW.DE | 15.02.2013.

  • Bulgaria, Greece Must Unite against Macedonia, Turkey in Agriculture

    Bulgaria, Greece Must Unite against Macedonia, Turkey in Agriculture

    Bulgarian Minister of Agriculture and Foods Miroslav Naydenov. Photo by BGNES

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    Bulgaria and Greece should team up to offer strong competition in the area of agriculture against non-EU neighbors Macedonia and Turkey, argued Bulgarian Agriculture Minister Miroslav Naydenov.

    Saturday Naydenov visited Greek livestock breeding exhibition Zootechnia in Thessaloniki.

    “There is a competition pressure in agriculture on the part of Turkey and Macedonia, who are not part of the EU and their agriculture sectors can enjoy privileges not available to agriculture producers in the EU,” said the Bulgarian minister in an interview for ANA-MPA.

    “We are neighbors with Greece and our ambition is to be able to increase mutual exchange,” stressed Naydenov.

    The Bulgarian Agriculture Minister noted that Greek agriculture companies already have the established practice of using Bulgarian raw products, and suggested that this can be boosted.

    He also called for an increased trade exchange of produce, with more Bulgarian grain products to be imported in Greece, and more Greek fruit and vegetables to be imported in Bulgaria.

    In particular, Naydenov stressed that Bulgaria has still work to do in the absorption of EU subsidies in agriculture to achieve the full potential of the sector.

    Tags: greece, Greek, Thessaloniki, Miroslav Naydenov, agriculture, greece, turkey, EU, subsidies

    via Bulgaria: Bulgaria, Greece Must Unite against Macedonia, Turkey in Agriculture – Bulgarian Min – Novinite.com – Sofia News Agency.

  • EU squanders £100m on train line in Turkey

    EU squanders £100m on train line in Turkey

    BRUSSELS bureaucrats have handed more than £100million to Turkey to build a high-speed rail link – in case the country joins the EU.

    There will be no return on investment from the railway for Brussels
    There will be no return on investment from the railway for Brussels

    The staggering sum does not have to be paid back and there will be no return on the investment.

    The cash is from a £12.1billion fund to support nations hoping to join the EU to which Britain contributes £120million a year.

    News of the money for the rail link between Turkey’s two biggest cities, Istanbul and Ankara, provoked outrage last night.

    Tory MP Douglas Carswell labelled the EU’s decision “bizarre”.

    He said: “Other countries that have given money to Turkey, such as China, expect a return on their capital.

    “It is funny how a communist country understands the fundamental principal of capitalism while the EU elite are giving money to Turkey without looking for a return on their investment.”

    Euro MP William Dartmouth, Ukip’s trade spokesman, called for an end to funding for countries awaiting membership.

    He said: “I cannot see how this project would really benefit the EU. The fact that British taxpayers’ money is going towards funding a new railway line in Turkey when our Government is forcing huge cuts on services and infrastructure at home will no doubt appal many people.”

    Work on the 331-mile high-speed train line began in 2003. The EU’s European Investment Bank has so far ploughed £1billion into the project in loans on top of the £100million grant.

    Other countries that have given money to Turkey such as China expect a return on their capital.

    Tory MP Douglas Carswell

    EU official Jean-Christophe Filori defended handing over the sums, saying the line will help European businessmen get to Ankara quickly to sign contracts.

    But public appetite in Turkey for joining the EU is waning and last night one of their senior officials warned they would not wait forever.

    Turkey’s chief negotiator on EU accession Egemen Bagis said his country was committed to joining the 27-member bloc but admitted they were not in favour of adopting the euro currency – despite it being a condition for entry.

    Mr Bagis touted Turkey’s sway in the Middle East as a major boon for Europe should it be allowed to join the EU.

    via EU squanders £100m on train line in Turkey | World | News | Daily Express.

  • Frustrated Turkey still wants EU entry, but maybe not euro

    Frustrated Turkey still wants EU entry, but maybe not euro

    By Mohammed Abbas

    LONDON | Wed Feb 13, 2013 2:14pm EST

    Turkey's EU Affairs Minister Bagis talks during an interview with Reuters in Istanbul

    (Reuters) – Turkey is committed to joining the European Union despite mounting frustration over decades of talks on the issue, but has little appetite for adopting the euro currency, a senior Turkish official said on Wednesday.

    In a speech in London, Turkey’s chief negotiator on EU accession said it was time the EU made up its mind on whether Turkey can join the 27-member bloc, and said it should be allowed in even if some countries object.

    Talks on Turkish integration into Europe originally began in 1963, but the intractable dispute over the divided island of Cyprus – an EU member that Turkey does not recognize – have blocked talks on several policy issues candidate states must conclude before entry.

    “We want to be in the EU, but the EU has to make a decision. The decision to start the negotiation process with Turkey was a unanimous decision, and only a unanimous decision can put an end to this process,” Egemen Bagis, EU affairs minister and senior member of the ruling Justice and Development (AK) Party, said.

    “If there’s one principle of the EU I would like to criticize it’s the unanimity principle … One single member country, the Greek Cypriots, can block the opening of the energy chapter,” he said, accusing Cyprus of holding the EU “hostage”.

    The island was split in a Turkish invasion in 1974 triggered by a brief Greek-inspired coup.

    Turkish Prime Minster Tayyip Erdogan has said the delay was “unforgivable”, warning that the EU would lose Turkey, a mostly Muslim and largely conservative country, if it was not granted membership by 2023.

    Enthusiasm among the Turkish public for EU membership is waning given the bloc’s economic woes, particularly the sovereign debt crisis hitting some members of the currency union, but Bagis was confident any referendum would pass.

    “If there was a vote today I could easily get a yes vote … on membership of the EU, but I’m not so sure about joining the euro zone,” Bagis said.

    GROWING INFLUENCE

    That could pose problems for accession given that joining the euro zone single currency bloc is a condition for entry.

    However, Bagis said economic circumstances and opposition to the euro and could change by the time accession is agreed.

    Formal talks to join the EU have stalled since they were launched in 2005, and Turkey has completed only one of the 35 chapters need for entry.

    On Tuesday, France said it was ready to unblock membership talks on one of the chapters, in contrast to its position under former President Nicolas Sarkozy, who said Turkey did not form part of Europe.

    Bagis said France’s change of heart was “better late than never”, and lambasted “narrow minded” politicians who have objected to accession, citing discrimination and Islamophobia.

    Some EU countries express concern about Turkey’s handling of human rights, freedom of expression and treatment of minorities. Turkey says it is addressing those concerns, and on Wednesday drafted changes to its penal code [ID:nL5N0BD3D9].

    Bagis dismissed concerns about mass Turkish emigration to other EU countries after accession, saying that Turkey’s growing economic clout meant that it instead was at risk from immigration from other EU states.

    “Of course, every nation has their pride. So does mine. And no country has been kept in the waiting room for 54 years. Sometimes our reactions might seem emotional, but believe me if anyone else was in our shoes …,” he said, referring to when Turkey applied for association with the then European Economic Community.

    Turkey, a long-time NATO member, has seen its diplomatic influence rise alongside its economic prosperity. The Islamist-rooted AK Party says Turkey has jumped to 16th largest economy in the world from 26th since it came to power in 2002.

    Turkey’s stock is particularly high in the Middle East, where it is seen as a model for a prosperous Islamic democracy, and has won admiration for its tough stance on Israel.

    Bagis touted Turkey’s sway in the Middle East as a major boon for Europe should it be allowed to join the EU.

    “The EU is the grandest peace project in the history of mankind … Turkey, being the most eastern part of the West, and the most Western part of the East, can turn this continental project into a global peace project,” he said.

    (Editing by Alison Williams)

    via Frustrated Turkey still wants EU entry, but maybe not euro | Reuters.