Sunday, 28 04 2024
Sunday, 28 04 2024
11:19
Idram and IDBank as participants of Career City Fest
15:07
Ukrainian pilots are training on F-16 fighters in France
14:48
“Now it is more protected.” NA Speaker about Tavush
14:29
Blinken arrived in Beijing
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China is servicing a Russian ship carrying weapons from North Korea to Russia
13:51
We always attach importance to the development of Armenian-French parliamentary relations
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Warsaw is ready to help Kyiv to return Ukrainians to Poland
12:54
Gasparini’s team reaches the Italian Cup final
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“Liverpool” loses in the Merseyside derby
12:16
No precipitation is expected, and the air temperature will rise by 4-6 degrees
11:57
Armenian boxers continue to win in Serbia
A commemorative event was held in Vienna
11:19
Aliyev noted how much territory Armenia and Azerbaijan have demarcated
11:00
The Syrian People’s Assembly delegation visited the Armenian Genocide Memorial
10:41
“We remember and demand.” Minister of Foreign Affairs of Canada
10:32
Cash transactions over 10,000 euros have been banned in the EU
“In Canada, April is considered the month of condemnation of the Genocide.” Trudeau
USA
10:03
Biden signed a $61 billion aid project to Ukraine
17:01
“The ideology that dictates genocide must be condemned.” Alain Simonyan
16:42
Let us keep alive the memory of the victims of pogroms, deportations and persecutions. Macron
16:23
Great Britain will supply high-precision aerial bombs to Ukraine
16:04
France proposed to the EU to impose new sanctions against Russia
USA
15:45
“We also pay tribute to the endurance of the Armenian people.” Biden
The US ambassador paid tribute at the Tsitsernakaberd memorial complex
We commemorate the victims of the Armenian Genocide of 1915. Ambassador Decotigny
In the 21st century, 2020-2023, we witnessed another policy of ethnic cleansing. RA MFA
14:29
The highest leadership of the country visited Tsitsernakaberd
14:10
Today is the 109th anniversary of the Genocide
13:51
Let the martyrs of the Armenian Genocidee and all our other martyrs sleep comforted by the Republic of Armenia. prime minister
The Secretary of the Security Council will not go to Russia

Why is EU membership important? Markar Yesayan

Today’s Zaman published Markar Yesayan’s recent article on EU’s recent progress report on Turkey and Turkey’s reaction.

Full article is presented below:

Regardless of its results, Turkey’s bid for EU membership is a win-win process for the country.
Turkey wins either way and accordingly in the first scenario, Turkey complies with EU membership requirements and the union acts fairly, granting it membership. In the second, Turkey is denied membership and concludes that it doesn’t need to join the EU anyhow, similar to Norway, which has nonetheless recently awarded a Nobel Prize to the union.

But in this case, if we are not sure that Turkey is more democratic than the EU by its standards, we have to admit that the EU membership perspective still remains motivation for democratization in Turkey. Regardless, it seems that the prospect of EU membership has been absent from Turkey’s agenda for a while. The government has recently criticized the EU for what it sees as double standards coming from the bloc. But this was much more the case in 2005 and in 1999, when the prejudice against Turkey was even stronger; since then, Turkey has gone through a huge transformation that has included democratic steps.

Turkey is not a homogenous country; likewise, EU member countries and the European parliament are not homogenous either. There is both support and dissent for Turkey’s membership within the EU bloc. But the discrepancy in position regarding Turkey doesn’t alter Turkey’s status as a candidate country, one that has been in membership talks since 2005. The process is ongoing and represents a vital issue for Turkey, even if it’s not the number one agenda item at the moment.

For this reason, strong reactions within Turkey to the latest EU progress report on the country, despite praise for these reports up until 2007, don’t bode well for national politics.

It should be noted that the EU raises such criticisms vis-à-vis its own member states as well. Hungary, for instance, is being strongly criticized for its policies regarding the Roma people and foreigners. We have to get used to the criticisms and avoid being reactionary.

What are the reasons for this reaction and opposition within Turkey? Why did the government’s EU minister say that Turkey no longer needs the EU? Why did the chair of the parliamentary Constitutional Reconciliation Commission throw away the progress report? Why did Turkey’s economy minister argue that the EU is the most hypocritical institution in history, and that it actually deserves a Nobel Prize for being hypocritical?

The Justice and Development Party (AK Party) is a pragmatic party that has relied on Turkey’s EU membership bid as a source of legitimization in its war against the military guardianship during its initial years in office. There was no other way than democratization and introduction of reforms to defeat military tutelage. Additionally, there was a demand among the public for EU-related reforms. Therefore, the government’s objectives overlapped with demands for reform by the EU and popular support was in line. But with the conclusion of the dissolution case in 2007 and the adoption of the constitutional amendments in a referendum on Sept 12, 2010, the government acquired the power it was seeking and “won the war.”

Around the same time, EU membership became less popular. Visible achievements were made and the enemy was defeated. So the government concluded that there was no longer any need for EU membership.

But there is a serious problem. Is it really true that Turkey does not need the EU? Is the reform process in Turkey complete? Is it really possible to argue that there is reversal from the reforms and that the deep state has been fully defeated? As I noted earlier, regardless of the final outcome, did Turkey become a democratic state by the EU standards such as to make membership unnecessary?

I don’t think that this is the case. True, Turkey has introduced serious reforms, but these reforms remain incomplete: the process of democratization needs its final touches. There is still the Kurdish problem and the issue of the PKK. Indeed, many criticisms in the progress report appropriately point out our shortcomings in several areas. The remedies for these problems are included in the EU acquis. Interestingly, there is no barrier such as military guardianship standing before the government if it chooses to introduce these reforms. In addition, Turks are still eager for the reforms.

It is clear, then, that the government’s reactions to the EU progress report are not based on any rational consideration.

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