Contact Us

Turkey-EU Summit planned for March

Romanian Foreign Minister Teodor Meleșcanu said on Monday that they were working on a summit that would bring together Turkish and EU officials in the Romanian capital.

Daily Sabah TÜRKIYE
Published January 21,2019
Subscribe
File Photo

Turkey and the European Union may hold a summit in Bucharest in early March, Romanian Foreign Minister Teodor Meleșcanu said Monday.

Romania is the current holder of the presidency of the Council of the European Union.

Noting that they strongly support negotiations with Turkey, Meleşcanu said that they are working on a summit that will bring together President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and EU officials in the Romanian capital, however, there is no set date yet.

The foreign minister said that they intend to boost talks between Turkey and the EU, including a renewal of the customs union agreement.

Relations between Turkey and the EU, particularly with Germany, have been strained over a range of issues.

Ankara has been stressing that the EU fails to understand the challenges that the county faces, and calls on all sides to take Turkey's concerns into consideration, particularly against the PKK and the Gülenist Terror Group (FETÖ), which carried out the failed July 15 coup attempt.

Regarding the customs union agreement, European Parliament's Turkey rapporteur Kati Piri said that the majority in European Parliament is in favor of modernization, "however, before that, we expect serious signals from Turkey regarding its commitments to EU standards."

Ankara's customs union agreement with the EU came into force in 1995. Both Turkey and the EU seek to expand the scope of the agreement, which would have positive effects on trade relations in various industries. However, Turkey's worsening relations with Germany have crippled the process.Although it was one of the first countries to join the European Economic Community (EEC) in 1959, and applied for full EU membership in 1987, Turkey still has candidate country status. In the meantime, many countries in Europe have been accepted as EU members, despite applying much later than Ankara.

Official accession talks with Ankara began in 2005. However, negotiations stalled in 2007 due to objections from Greek Cyprus concerning the divided island of Cyprus, as well as opposition from Germany and France. Since then, Turkey has only fulfilled and closed one of 16 opened chapters of the Copenhagen criteria.