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Turkish Press Review, 05-06-03

Turkish Press Review Directory - Previous Article - Next Article

From: Turkish Directorate General of Press and Information <http://www.byegm.gov.tr>

<LINK href="http://www.byegm.gov.tr_yayinlarimiz_chr_pics_css/tpr.css" rel=STYLESHEET type=text/css> e-mail : newspot@byegm.gov.tr <caption> <_caption> Summary of the political and economic news in the Turkish press this morning

03.06.2005

LEADERS MEET IN ANKARA TO DISCUSS CYPRUS ISSUE ERDOGAN MAKES REVISIONS TO CABINET RICE, ASSELBORN VOICE SUPPORT FOR TURKEY’S EU BID, EU CONSTITUTION MOLIVYATIS: “TURKEY’S EU MEMBERSHIP PROCESS SHOULD CONTINUE” DUTCH LEADER: “WE SAID NO TO STOP TURKS JOINING THE EU” KANDOGAN REJOINS DYP ANOTHER TRUCK DRIVER KILLED IN IRAQ BABACAN: “TURKEY WILL BEGIN ITS EU TALKS ON OCT. 3” FROM THE COLUMNS... FROM THE COLUMNS... FROM THE COLUMNS... ANKARA’S DUTY BY ERGUN BABAHAN (SABAH)

CONTENTS

  • [01] LEADERS MEET IN ANKARA TO DISCUSS CYPRUS ISSUE
  • [02] ERDOGAN MAKES REVISIONS TO CABINET
  • [03] RICE, ASSELBORN VOICE SUPPORT FOR TURKEY’S EU BID, EU CONSTITUTION
  • [04] MOLIVYATIS: “TURKEY’S EU MEMBERSHIP PROCESS SHOULD CONTINUE”
  • [05] DUTCH LEADER: “WE SAID NO TO STOP TURKS JOINING THE EU”
  • [06] KANDOGAN REJOINS DYP
  • [07] ANOTHER TRUCK DRIVER KILLED IN IRAQ
  • [08] BABACAN: “TURKEY WILL BEGIN ITS EU TALKS ON OCT. 3”
  • [09] FROM THE COLUMNS... FROM THE COLUMNS... FROM THE COLUMNS...
  • [10] ANKARA’S DUTY BY ERGUN BABAHAN (SABAH)

  • [01] LEADERS MEET IN ANKARA TO DISCUSS CYPRUS ISSUE

    A Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC) delegation arrived in Ankara yesterday for two days of talks with Turkey’s top leaders on the Cyprus issue. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul and Deputy Premier Abdullatif Sener met with TRNC President Mehmet Ali Talat, Prime Minister Ferdi Sabit Soyer and Foreign Minister Serdar Denktas to discuss the Cyprus issue and to establish a new plan on it. During the three-hour gathering, the leaders agreed to make efforts aimed at ending the TRNC’s international isolation and urging Greek Cypriots to a settlement. Erdogan is expected to present the Turkish side’s view to United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan and US President George W. Bush during his US visit to begin next week. Before his departure for the US, Erdogan will also discuss the plan with President Ahmet Necdet Sezer. /Star/

    [02] ERDOGAN MAKES REVISIONS TO CABINET

    After a weekly meeting with President Ahmet Necdet Sezer yesterday, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced a long-waited revision to the Cabinet. Under the revision, State Minister Guldal Aksit was replaced by Istanbul Deputy Nimet Cubukcu, Trabzon Deputy Faruk Nafiz Ozak was named the new public works and housing minister in place of Zeki Ergezen, and Diyarbakir Deputy Mehmet Mehdi Eker became the new agriculture minister in place of Sami Guclu. Erdogan stated that he wanted to launch a new initiative in the government and thanked the exiting ministers for their service. He further stressed that the president had approved the new appointments and that the new ministers would begin their term in office today after the decision is published in the Official Gazette. /Aksam/

    [03] RICE, ASSELBORN VOICE SUPPORT FOR TURKEY’S EU BID, EU CONSTITUTION

    US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said yesterday that a Europe which includes Turkey and which is united around common values is in everybody’s interests. Following a European Union-US ministerial meeting in Washington with EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana, EU Term President Luxembourg’s Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn and EU Commissioner Benita Ferror-Waldner, Rice said, "A Europe that is outward-looking, not inward-looking, that is offering a European perspective and a European future to all of the democracies of Europe is extremely important to completing Europe's integration and Europe's unity. And that, of course, includes Turkey.” For his part, Asselborn said, “The next referendum [on the EU constitution] now will be in Luxembourg the 10th of July. This day will be very important because a lot of people will look to Luxembourg in Europe and even in other countries in the world. In Luxembourg, we know that more of Europe gave always more influence to our country and we hope that we can reverse this dynamic, this negative dynamic ... in Luxembourg we will reverse the situation, then we will have the next referendums in autumn and you will see that the cause is not yet lost." /Cumhuriyet/

    [04] MOLIVYATIS: “TURKEY’S EU MEMBERSHIP PROCESS SHOULD CONTINUE”

    Speaking at a press conference held by Greece’s Foreign Press Association yesterday, Greek Foreign Minister Petros Moliviatis said that results of referendums held in France and the Netherlands wouldn’t change Athens’ policy towards Ankara and that Turkey’s European Union membership bid should continue. Moliviatis added that Athens favored the EU’s enlargement and that Turkey’s EU membership negotiations would start on Oct. 3 as scheduled. He added that nobody within the EU has requested a change to this date. /Milliyet/

    [05] DUTCH LEADER: “WE SAID NO TO STOP TURKS JOINING THE EU”

    Dutch populist leader Geert Wilders said yesterday that the rejection of the European Union Constitution at Wednesday’s referendum in the Netherlands was also a sign of opposition to Turks joining the EU. In an article published in Italian daily Corriere della Sera, Wilders said that he was very pleased with the Dutch rejection of the Constitution. Stressing that he favored a union of cooperation both in the economy and politics with countries free to decide, Wilders added that he was opposed to European governments approving the beginning of Turkey’s accession talks. /Star/

    [06] KANDOGAN REJOINS DYP

    Denizli Deputy Ummet Kandogan, who resigned from the True Path Party (DYP) last month after being passed over for leadership positions, rejoined the party yesterday. The number of DYP seats in the Parliament thus rose to four. /Turkiye/

    [07] ANOTHER TRUCK DRIVER KILLED IN IRAQ

    A Turkish truck driver was killed yesterday by insurgents in Iraq north of Baghdad, said Iraqi security officials. More than 100 Turks have been killed in Iraq since the US invasion. /Star/

    [08] BABACAN: “TURKEY WILL BEGIN ITS EU TALKS ON OCT. 3”

    State Minister and newly appointed chief negotiator for Turkey’s European Union accession talks Ali Babacan said yesterday that Turkey would begin its EU accession talks on Oct. 3 as scheduled. Speaking at a conference of the Turkish-American Business Council at Istanbul’s Bogazici University, Babacan said that an important step before Turkey was to sign an additional customs protocol with new EU member countries. We are waiting for the bureaucratic procedures, and after their completion, we will sign it, said the state minister. Stressing that the road to the membership would not be easy, he added that in the middle- and long-term it would bear fruit. He added that the procedure was irreversible both in Turkey and the EU itself. US Ambassador to Ankara Eric Edelman also addressed the gathering. Sabah_

    [09] FROM THE COLUMNS... FROM THE COLUMNS... FROM THE COLUMNS...

    [10] ANKARA’S DUTY BY ERGUN BABAHAN (SABAH)

    Columnist Ergun Babahan comments on what Ankara’s duty should be in a period when European nations are against the enlargement of the European Union. A summary of his column is as follows:

    “Turkey is getting ready to enter a club whose influential members do not view its membership very favorably. Whether we accept this or not, the European nations are not only against Turkey’s membership in the European Union but also their own enlargement process.

    The results of this week’s referendums in France and the Netherlands show that the main pillars of the EU don’t like ‘newcomers’ very much.

    Now, the Erdogan government has to undertake a great duty, as do the European leaders.

    Firstly it must be realized that the EU project is not a popular movement. It is something which was planned only by a limited core of the European elite at the beginning. Later, this became a civilization-wide project.

    Today what the European leaders must do is to proceed on the path drawn by its founding members without bowing down to populist pressures.

    The EU has been able to make successful changes in nearby countries using a force called ‘soft power.’

    The biggest argument European politicians used against the use of brute force by the United States was the ability to change communities by the promises of the EU project.

    We’ve seen this in Turkey too. With the influence of this soft power, we’ve achieved reforms which couldn’t even be dreamt of just three or four years ago. We’ve made sweeping developments in the areas of human rights, democracy and the law.

    But are these enough? Of course not... However, our determination to continue with reforms is up to the EU leadership’s stance: It should not slam the door in our face.

    In order to prevent Turkey and the Balkans from becoming unstable and great sources of threat, the EU should claim to be the owner of what it signed last Dec.17 and start our membership talks this Oct. 3.

    In such a period, the AKP should also play a very important role: It should carefully avoid giving any ammunition to Europe’s suspicious public and its demagogic politicians to work with.

    Meanwhile, it should accelerate the reform process. We know that this process will give a brand new appearance to Turkey. The Justice and Development Party (AKP) should not sacrifice the next generations’ chance to live in a fully democratic and prosperous society for short-term political gain or to preserve balance within the party.”

    ARCHIVE

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