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News ID: 76061
Publish Date : 12 February 2020 - 22:19

Turkey Seeks EU Accession Amid Dispute

ANKARA (Xinhua) – Turkey has expressed willingness to start the frozen EU accession process, but chronic differences and rising tensions with the bloc over energy resources in eastern Mediterranean are on its way, experts say.
"We think it is time to open a new page in the accession process,” Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said last week in Ankara at a meeting with the ambassadors of EU countries, calling on the bloc to review its decision to suspend high-level meetings between the two sides.
"We see a constructive approach of EU’s term president Croatia on this issue,” Turkey’s top diplomat noted, warning of a growing "distrust between the two sides” at a time when one of the biggest countries of the bloc, Britain, has pulled out.
Analysts expressed skepticism on a tangible result of Turkey’s keenness to get the accession process back on track.
"If there is an initiative from both the EU and Turkey, there could be some progress,” Murat Onsoy, a scholar of international relations from Hacettepe University, told Xinhua.
Onsoy said the general attitude toward Ankara’s membership of the two biggest EU members, Germany and France, does not seem favorable.
"As in the past, France is still opposed to Turkey’s full membership and a domestic political crisis within Germany’s largest national party, the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), may hamper a possible reconciliation,” said the expert.
Turkey has been a candidate country to EU since 2005 but accession negotiations have been at a standstill for several years, following a prolonged period of state of emergency declared by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in the wake of a botched coup aiming to topple his government in 2016.
Ankara has launched a massive crackdown on U.S.-based preacher Fethullah Gulen and his followers, blaming them for the coup. However, the EU said that Erdogan used the coup as a pretext to silence all dissent, officially freezing accessions talks, accusing his administration of baffling the rule of law.