Turkey rejects 2005 for EU talks

The leader of Turkey’s new governing party, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has rejected a proposal to give the country a conditional start date of 2005 for its membership talks with the European Union.
Speaking on television, Mr Erdogan said Turkey has been waiting for more than 40 years at Europe’s door and that history would not forgive a new delay.
His comments come after the French President, Jacques Chirac, said Germany and France would back opening membership talks in 2005, if Turkey met the accession criteria.

The two countries suggest that EU leaders meet at the end of 2004 to evaluate the progress on political reforms and human rights in Turkey.

Turkey argues it has met most of the conditions set for membership talks, and has challenged the EU to prove it is not just a Christian club.

Turkey, which applied for membership in 1987 but was only formally declared a candidate 12 years later, wants EU leaders to give it a firm date to start membership talks at the forthcoming summit on enlargement in Copenhagen, Denmark.

Muslim majority

Of the candidate countries to enter the union, the mainly Muslim country is the only one that has so far failed to open accession talks, prompting accusations from Ankara that European leaders are discriminating against Turkey.

Mr Erdogan argued that Turkey came closer to meeting the criteria for membership than the other candidate countries.

"Whether or not the EU takes us in, we are meeting the Copenhagen criteria to elevate the living standards of our people. That is our real aim. We won’t stop because they don’t admit us," Mr Erdogan said in a television interview late on Thursday.

"We will ask that [the deadline] does not extend beyond 2003," he said.

In August, Turkey adopted a number of major reforms intended to boost its EU credentials, among them the abolition of the death penalty and increased freedoms for the Kurdish minority.