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Turkish Leader Demands Full EU Membership

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  • Turkish Leader Demands Full EU Membership

    By BENJAMIN HARVEY, Associated Press Writer
    8 minutes ago



    ISTANBUL, Turkey - Turkey's prime minister said Saturday the mostly Muslim nation will only accept full membership in the European Union, warning Austria's ambassador to drop talk about an associate partnership in the group.

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    The EU foreign ministers meet Sunday in Luxembourg to discuss Austria's insistence that Turkey be offered something less than full membership in the 25-nation EU, calling into question whether the bloc will open accession talks with the mostly Muslim nation on Monday, also in Luxembourg.

    Austria has claimed to be speaking in the name of the majority of Europeans in saying it does not want Turkey as a full member.

    But Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan told Austria its proposal was not an option, Turkish media said.

    Increasing diplomatic pressure, Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul also urged European leaders to keep their promises and open talks next week on Turkey joining the union, warning that the country will accept no new conditions.

    "If the European Union decides not to keep its word, if its own leaders decide to forget their signatures beneath the decisions they've made before the ink has even dried ... if they decide to ignore all this and impose new conditions that Turkey will never accept ... then of course in that case this kind of partnership can never be," Gul said told Parliament at its opening session.

    CNN-Turk showed footage of Prime Minister Erdogan confronting the Austrian ambassador at a a Saturday night reception to celebrate the opening of a new parliamentary session, telling him "If you continue to play politics like this, you'll fail in the next election."

    After more than 40 years of aspiring to join the European Union, Turkey feels it is being held hostage on the eve of negotiations by Austrian leaders using Turkey's EU bid as an issue in upcoming national elections.

    Erdogan told Austrian Chancellor Wolfgang Schuessel and Austrian President Heinz Fischer in telephone calls that the idea of a privileged partnership with the EU was a nonstarter, CNN-Turk and the semiofficial Anatolia news agency said.

    Justice Minister Cemil Cicek also urged the EU to keep its promises.

    "Human rights and freedoms are very important modern values," he said. "But keeping one's word is also a modern value."

    A poll by A&G Research of 1,834 people in 19 provinces showed the majority of Turkish people remain supportive of the EU bid, with 57.4 percent agreeing with the statement, "Turkey must join" the EU. The poll, which was taken Sept. 24-29, had a margin of error of 2 percentage points.

    Parliament Speaker Bulent Arinc said Turkey was taking note of Europe's actions, and that the country would continue to progress on its own terms if Europe decided not to deal with Turkey.

    "We are taking as a warning the political maneuvers of those working to obstruct our membership, which shock and amaze every reasonable man," Arinc said. "We didn't destroy our honor so much that we would sacrifice everything to be a member of the EU."

  • #2
    Turkish people still want to join EU

    ISTANBUL
    Cihan News Agency-National
    Turkish people still want to join EU
    Turkish people are mostly in favor of full EU membership despite the fact that the recent negative developments in the European Union (EU) regarding the opening of the Turkey's EU talks have reduced the confidence in the EU.

    A recent survey conducted face-to-face with 1834 people by A&G public opinion research company for Milliyet daily showed that there was a decline in the support for the EU compared to last year but the majority of the people still think that Turkey should join the EU.


    The results of the survey showed that those who want to enter the EU are mostly the young and men compared to the old and women. Another striking factor was that the more educated the people are, the more they support the EU.


    While 67.5 percent of the people were saying "Turkey should definitely enter the EU" in 2004, the rate has downed to 57.4 percent this year. However, the rate has never been under 50 percent since 2002, when it was 56.5 percent.


    18.2 percent of the people took part in the survey answered "It does not matter whether we join the EU or not" and 10.3 said "We must not enter the EU", rising 2 percent when compared to the last year.


    Another question in the survey was about the Cyprus issue. 47.6 percent think that "recognition of Greek Cyprus would not open Turkey's way to the EU membership" while 38.9 percent answer the opposite.


    66.3 percent responded "unacceptable" for a membership status in which free movement was not included. The rate of people who think that new and hard conditions would be brought before Turkey during the accession talks is 65.4. As high as 93.7 percent of the people vehemently opposed that recognition of allegations of so-called Armenian genocide should be accepted as a pre-requisite for EU membership.

    The participants of the survey also rated the leaders who made efforts for Turkey's EU membership. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan tops the list with 8.6 points out of 10. He is followed by German chancellor Schroeder by 7.8 percent and Italian PM Silvio Berlusconi by 7.1 percent.
    "All truth passes through three stages:
    First, it is ridiculed;
    Second, it is violently opposed; and
    Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

    Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

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