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Related: EU decision can not change Turkey's
route: PM
Austria refuses to back off in Turkey's accession talks: diplomat
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| British Foreign Secretary Jack
Straw(Middle), EU enlargement commissioner Olli Rehn(L) hold a press
conference in Luxembourg Oct.3, 2005. (Xinhua
photo) | LUXEMBOURG, Oct. 3 (Xinhuanet) -- An
emergency meeting of European Union (EU) foreign ministers failed to remove the
last hurdle to accession talks with Turkey by early Monday, casting doubt on the
formal opening of talks in the afternoon.
British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw, whose country
holds the EU presidency, admitted that the EU is in a "frustrating situation."
But bilateral talks between the EU presidency and the
European Commission with Austria will continue into the night, Straw told a
brief press conference.
Austria's insistence that talks with Ankara would
lead to something like "privileged partnership" instead of full membership
remains the major obstacle to the formal launch of talks on Monday afternoon.
Turkey has made clear that such an option is not
acceptable.
Straw would not say whether or not the talks could
start as scheduled on Monday.
"The time for formally beginning the negotiations ...
is 5 p.m. (1600 GMT) tomorrow (Monday) afternoon. It's still possible. But it
could sleep. Obviously, it's uncertain," said Straw.
EU commissioner for enlargement, Olli Rehn, expressed
optimism.
"I'm confident that we shall have a positive outcome
and start negotiations tomorrow (Monday)," he told the same press conference.
Swedish Foreign Minister Laila Freivalds told
reporters shortly after the end of the emergency meeting that Austria should
drop its demand.
Asked whether she saw movements by the Austrians in
the talks,she replied: "Very little, I'm afraid. They have to move more,
theyhave to drop their demand."
The foreign ministers will meet again later in the
morning to discuss the issue.
At an EU summit in December, EU leaders decided to
launch membership negotiations with Turkey this Monday. The start of the talks,
however, hit a snag when Austria insisted on giving the Muslim country a
"privileged partnership."
According to the EU's rules, Turkey's entry needs the
"nod" fromall 25 EU member states. The foreign ministers were trying to work
ĦĦout a negotiating framework -- basic rules -- for the negotiations,which are
expected to last 10 years or longer.
The Turkey talks appear to be ill-timed as the EU
itself has to put its house in order after its constitution was vetoed in France
and the Netherlands, and the 25-nation bloc has to sort out a budget for
2007-13.
Ordinary Europeans generally take a negative attitude
toward Turkey's EU membership, opinion polls show.
In France and Germany, the so-called EU engine, 47
percent ofthe population in France are against Turkey's accession while merely
11 percent are in favor. In Germany, the figures are 40 percent, 15 percent and
43 percent respectively, according to a recent survey conducted by Transatlantic
Trends.
Turkey signed a protocol in July to extend its
customs union agreement to the 10 new EU member states, including
Cyprus,satisfying the conditions for the start of membership talks.
However, Ankara said at the same time that the
signing of the protocol did not mean any form of political recognition of
Cyprus.
Ankara refuses to recognize the Greek-Cypriot
government in the south, which represents the whole Republic of Cyprus in the
EU. EU rules require a new member state to recognize all
its existing members.
The EU governments issued a compromise
counterstatment last month, allowing Turkey to recognize Cyprus before it
formally joins the EU, thus making the start of talks on Monday possible.
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