Turkey says EU turning talks into ‘children’s game’

epa06149839 (FILE) - Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan speaks during a rally after referendum victory, at the Presidential Palace in Ankara, Turkey, 17 April 2017 (reissued 18 August 2017). According to news reports on 18 August 2017, Erdogan urged Turkish voters in Germany not to vote for the three main political parties Christian Democratic Union (CDU), the Social Democratic Party (SPD) and the Green Party (Buendnis 90/Die Gruenen) in the upcoming federal elections on 24 September.  EPA/TUMAY BERKIN

TALLINN / Reuters

Turkey said the European Union was making a “child’s game” out of its membership talks, wrangling over threats to end them, and reminded the bloc of its strategic importance abutting Middle Eastern
conflict zones.
After trading bitter barbs for months with President Tayyip Erdogan, largely over Turkey’s human rights record, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said it was clear Turkey should not join the EU and accession talks should end.
Most other EU states reacted cautiously to her comments and said any real discussion would be possible only after German elections on September 24. But some, like Aus-
tria, backed Merkel and some officials have suggested
suspension of talks.
“This is not a children’s game at all,” Turkish EU Minister Omer Celik said after meeting EU foreign ministers in Estonia’s capital Tallinn. “You cannot talk about suspending
or halting the accession negotiations and then restarting
it in six months, and that Turkey is a great strategic and important country.”
The bloc has been shocked by the scale of Erdogan’s purges and the intensity of his crackdown on dissenters – including academics and journalists – after a failed coup
last year. Many EU ministers
in Tallinn stressed that Turkey, a NATO ally of 80 million
people, was indispensable
for security cooperation and keeping a lid on immigra-
tion to the bloc from the tumultuous Middle East.

ON AND OFF
French President Emmanuel Macron said separately that Turkey remained a vital partner for the EU. Celik reiterated his call to open more areas
of negotiations with the EU. “This approach of ‘I froze talks, now I restarted them’ is not
acceptable for us,” he said.
The talks started in 2005, viewed by many in Turkey and abroad as a stimulus in themselves to Turkish democratic reform. But they have stalled over opposition from EU states including Cyprus and France, Erdogan’s track record on
human rights and other issues.
While Austria and Luxembourg were among those who backed Merkel’s tougher line on Turkey, Hungary, Lithuania and Britain – which will be leaving the EU – held the opposite view.
“All European countries, including the UK, have concerns, serious concerns about human rights in Turkey, about arrests… (and) the treatment of journalists,” British foreign minister Boris Johnson told reporters.

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