Turkey says EU ‘incomplete’ without it, eyes better US ties

Turkey says EU ‘incomplete’ without it, eyes better US ties

FPJ BureauUpdated: Thursday, May 30, 2019, 10:04 AM IST
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Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut  Cavusoglu, speaking at the opening of an ambassadors meeting, said he wanted more chapters in the accession talks to be opened by “lifting artificial obstacles” to their EU membership.

Ankara : Turkey, on Monday, urged the European Union to revive stalled negotiations on Ankara joining the bloc, saying without it Europe was “incomplete”.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, speaking at the opening of an ambassadors meeting, said he wanted more chapters in the accession talks to be opened by “lifting artificial obstacles” to their EU membership.

A “chapter” is a specific area of negotiation, ranging on issues from human rights to economic cooperation. Cavusoglu did not specify which chapters he meant.

He also said Turkey expects “visa liberalisation for Turkish citizens to be provided immediately”, a reference to EU commitments on visa-free travel for nearly 80 million Turkish citizens made in March under an EU-Ankara deal to curb migrants entering Europe.

Progress on visa-free travel has been held up by EU demands — rejected outright — that President Recep Tayyip Erdogan amend Turkey’s draconian anti-terror laws to ensure they do not breach human rights.

Erdogan threatened in December to cancel the migrant deal, which has dramatically reduced the numbers crossing into Europe via Greece.

The accession talks stalled after a failed coup in July by a rogue Turkish military faction was followed with a crackdown that saw mass arrests of not only officers but also journalists, activists, academics and others. “We’ve played an important role in Europe’s past and will do so in the future,” Cavusoglu said, adding: “A Europe without Turkey is incomplete.”

Relations between the EU and the NATO member state have soured in the past year over human rights and freedom of speech issues.

US-Turkey relations were also strained in the aftermath of the failed coup attempt, with Ankara accusing the Pennsylvania- based Islamic preacher Fethullah Gulen of being the mastermind behind the putsch.

But Cavusoglu said he thought relations would improve under incoming US president Donald Trump. “We believe the US will not continue to make the same mistakes it has previously made,” he said.

He repeated a demand for the United States to extradite Gulen and his top followers to Turkey — request that has been made repeatedly since the thwarted July 15 coup.

“Turkey and the US have the potential to create positive effects in a wide geographical region,” Cavusoglu said.                —AFP

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