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Turkey’s EU minister Bağış calls on European Union to open one negotiation chapter for Turkey while also saying that the union is giving positives signals to Ankara on opening of chapters

EU signals a new start to negotiations with Turkey, says EU Minister Bağış (C) at the 31st meeting of the EU-Turkey Joint Consultative Committee. AA photo

EU signals a new start to negotiations with Turkey, says EU Minister Bağış (C) at the 31st meeting of the EU-Turkey Joint Consultative Committee. AA photo

As the European Union signals a new start to stalemated negotiations with Turkey during Ireland’s rotating presidency, Turkey’s EU minister has called on the bloc to open the 19th chapter, Social Policy and Employment. Turkey has had positive signals from France suggesting it will lift its block on some negotiation chapters, the EU minister said.

Turkey adopted two pieces of legislation on union rights to comply with the benchmarks of the 19th chapter, EU Minister Egemen Bağış said yesterday, speaking at the 31st meeting of the EU-Turkey Joint Consultative Committee. Bağış said following his visit to Dublin in January he would visit France in February too.

However, Staffan Nilsson, president of the European Economic and Social Committee, said the first assessment made by ILO and global unions of Turkey’s new union rights legislation still fell short of complying with the total EU Acquis.

The EU is not the only direction Turkey is moving in politically, Nilsson said, therefore the perception of accession must be credible, and the process must be kept alive by the EU institutions and member states.

Yet, Nilsson also expressed concern on recent developments in Turkey. “Statements made by Turkish politicians have made me sometimes wonder how much the EU is on the agenda of Turkey. For instance, to discuss the possibility of reestablishment of the death penalty would be totally the wrong direction,” he noted.

“If we look also at key areas, fundamental freedoms and rights such as freedom of expression, freedom of association and the right of fair trial, it’s clear that on those issues the situation has not moved in the best direction,” he added.

They knew that Turkey was in a particular geographical position with some security threats on its borders, Nilsson said. “But the context should never justify a breach in the fundamental rights of citizens of Turkey.”

Citing the recent debate over Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s suggestion that the separation of powers was the main obstacle of the government, Bağış said one of the prominent elements in writing the new charter was the principle of separation of powers, referring to the presidential system.
“Unfortunately the separation of powers appears as clashes of powers at the moment due to the seizure of authority by bureaucratic oligarchy,” Bağış said. Separation of powers does not mean the judiciary dominates the legislature and executive, he added.

PM Erdoğan due to visit Brussels

Bağış said José Manuel Barroso, president of the European Commission, and Herman Van Rompuy, the president of the European Council, have officially invited Erdoğan to Brussels.

“We insisted Prime Minister Erdoğan be invited to the EU summit, where leaders of member countries also participate. We have signals that the prime minister will be invited for the summit next March,” Bağış said.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel would also visit Turkey in late February, the minister added.

Hisarcıklıoğlu rebukes low profile participation

Rifat Hisarcıklıoğlu, chairman of the Union of Chambers and Commodity Exchanges of Turkey (TOBB), rebuked EU officials’ low participation to the Joint Consultative Committee meeting.

“This committee awaits support and courage,” Hisarcıklıoğlu said yesterday at the meeting.
He said the EU should not turn in on itself in order to overcome the economic crisis, adding that the EU should consider enlargement as an opportunity.

December/21/2012

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UN Named

12/21/2012 4:22:20 PM

Turkey paid 15 billion Euros fees to EU for being in enlargement / accession process and got 7,5 billion euros aid for development projects since 1959. EU must pay back to 7,5 billion stolen Turkish money to Turkey and then cancel the accession process of Turkey.

KARTAL BEY

12/21/2012 3:22:43 PM

@adam orman My friend, calling anyone prejudice and racist is easy. Please take look around you and ask yourself what environment you live in before you throw a stone at ones direction. Than ask your cousins or friends from i.e. Beiersdorf what they think of the UE.

Murat

12/21/2012 2:14:08 PM

I am all for the process. It is what matters, not the membership. Otherwise we all know an EU membership is not in the cards, many Europeans and and increasing number of Turks are against the idea of actual membership. Turkey is already part of Europe. Let the Turkish flag flutter alone over our skies.

dogan kemal ileri

12/21/2012 2:02:04 PM

Totally correct adam orman. Besides the EU has been taken over by Germany and reeks of the third reich.The Euro is most certainly the re-incarnation of the Deutch Mark and benefits Germany the most as 26 countries continue to pay homage to it.Germany is the mastermind of the operation against Turkiye's membership of the EU because they fear competition.All we have to do is give our indigenous Turkish population the freedoms constitutionally they have never enjoyed and watch them go.

nyob nyobb

12/21/2012 12:53:49 PM

Freedom of speach is a necessary requiremment to join, not only economic development. Dear Adam, is the EU more "racist, financially and morally corrupt and about to fall apart" than Turkey?

Optimist 23

12/21/2012 10:19:46 AM

@Adam: but more democratic and human rights obeying than many, many more countries. Falling apart may be wishful thinking, yes difficult to bring 27 members to the same level of responsibility, but even that will happen eventually.

Vargen Vargen

12/21/2012 9:38:25 AM

What? Is Erdogan going to visit Brussels? It must be the first time? I got the impresson that he has been more fond of haning out with genociders in Sudan, terrorist leaders from Hamas and dictators like Gaddaffi.

Faruk Beisser

12/21/2012 9:29:55 AM

As long as the Great Leader and his Gülen/Erbakan AKP stomp on democratic principles, Turkey cannot join the EU, as the EU does not want an Iranian Turkey as a member, only as a true democratic one.

Diren Sesel

12/21/2012 3:48:57 AM

"EU should consider enlargement as an opportunity", wasn't the whole point Turkey in EU was to be part of democratic civilized union of common values ?, Under the Islamic regime Turkey cannot fulfill the rights that EU want, Cyprus is an obstacle, Turkey has wasted a lot time doing nothing but building mosques and criticizing Israel, Bagis talks of nonsense as usual.

adam orman

12/21/2012 1:13:35 AM

Turkiye does not need (and never needed) to be a member of EU which is prejudice and racist, financially and morally corrupt and about to fall apart anyway.
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