Subject: Athens News Agency Bulletin Topic: ana --------------------------- (Apo to Ellnviko Grafeio Tupou kai Plnroforiwv, Ottawa, Canada E-Mail Address: grnewsca@sympatico.ca) Athens indicates willingness to lift veto on customs union on receipt of 'specific guarantees' from Turkey, EU -------------------------------------------------------------- Athens, 4/2/1995 (ANA) Greek government spokesman Evangelos Venizelos said here yesterday that Athens was willing to change its stance opposing the EU-Turkey customs union "only if there are specific guarantees from both Turkey and the EU." He said guarantees should be given on a settlement to the Cyprus problem, respect for and protection of human rights in Turkey and a commitment that Cyprus would be included in the next phase of EU enlargement. Such a commitment, he added, necessitated a timetable for the commencement of accession negotiations. In Paris meanwhile, Commission President Jacques Santer said France wanted the European Union to promise to open accession negotiations with Cyprus within six months of concluding a conference on EU reform -- dubbed the intergovernmental conference -- in 1996. Under the French proposal, which is intended to persuade Greece to lift its veto on an EU customs union with Turkey because of the unresolved dispute over Cyprus, the EU would also engage in a regular political dialogue to help prepare Cyprus for membership on conditions similar to those offered to eastern and central European states which are also candidates. In Athens, Foreign Minister Karolos Papoulias had one hour of talks yesterday with Italian Ambassador to Athens Giovanni Dominedo. The talks according to informed sources, focused on Greece's objections to the five-nation meeting on Turkey's future relations with the European Union. The meeting in London, Thursday, brought together the foreign ministers of Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Turkey. Among the issues discussed was Turkey's bid to sign a customs union agreement with the EU which Greece has vetoed. The customs union between Turkey and the EU was put on hold last year when Greece vetoed the agreement, arguing that it could not go ahead unless a date was set for the commencement of talks on Cyprus' entry to the 15-member bloc and Turkey improved its abysmal human rights record. An EU-Turkey pact would give Ankara closer relations with Brussels than any non-members except Norway and Iceland. In return for dropping its tariffs on EU goods, it would win access for its products to the vast EU market. Speaking Wednesday, on the London meeting, Mr. Papoulias expressed concern over "whether such initiatives and groupings contribute to the correct attainment of a common EU foreign policy," while government spokesman Evangelos Venizelos said that "such types of group initiatives should not replace, nor give the impression that they re place, Community initiatives." Mr. Papoulias met with German Ambassador to Athens Leopold Bill von Bredow to discuss the same issue on Wednesday. Mr. Venizelos declined later to comment on the London meeting, saying that Athens was awaiting an official briefing from the ambassadors of the participating countries. Mr. Venizelos stressed, however, that Greece would change its stance opposing the EU-Turkey customs union "only if there are specific guarantees from both Turkey and the EU." The EU General Affairs Council convenes in Brussels on Monday to discuss the customs union agreement with Turkey, as well as relations with Turkey and Cyprus. On the sidelines of the three-day meeting, Alternate Foreign Minister George Alexander Mangakis, due to leave for Brussels on Sunday, will meet with German Foreign Minister Klaus Kinkel. Press sources said the French Presidency will direct efforts to conclude the agreement with Turkey, or at least manage to remove existing reservations. The same sources said the Presidency had been asked to examine, at the same time, the Cyprus accession and the island Republic's relations with the European Union. An Agence France Presse (AFP) dispatch from Brussels yesterday quoted diplomatic sources as saying that the members of the EU were ready to approve the customs union "within weeks", after clearing the way for Greece to lift its veto to the accord. According to the sources, European Commissioner for external relations Hans van den Broek, will call in Brussels on Monday on EU foreign ministers to set a date for opening discussions on Cypriot membership. "If a date is indeed fixed, Greece should be in a position to lift is veto," AFP quoted a Greek EU official as saying. Mr. van den Broek aims to start pre-membership negotiations with Cyprus -- as well as Malta -- six months after the end of the 1996 intergovernmental conference. The Greek government spokesman said such a timetable would be acceptable to Athens. Should the 15 agree a date Monday, the customs union accord should be signed at a March 6 meeting of the EU-Turkey Association Council. Ankara is hoping the compromise will also free up a financial protocol worth 600 million ECU's ($7.2 million), blocked by Greece since 1991. But analysts, the AFP said, say further ties will depend on Ankara providing EU member states with guarantees on human rights, notably regarding Turkey's Kurdish community. At the London meeting, Turkish Foreign Minister Murat Karayalcin attempted to soften the thorny rights issue. "Turkey has already signed agreements on human rights within the European Council," Mr. Karayalcin told a press conference. "We are open to any type of investigations on human rights violations." In Brussels yesterday, a high-ranking British diplomat stressed that any agreement on Cyprus' entry into the EU would have to "clearly tell the Turks that they will have no veto... and tell the Cypriots that they must resolve questions over the status of their island." As part of efforts to be briefed on the content of the five-party meeting, Cyprus Foreign Minister Alecos Michaelides arrived in Bonn yesterday to meet with German caretaker Foreign Under-Secretary Hans Fridriech von Pletz. Following the meeting, Mr. Michaelides told reporters the meeting had been "very useful and (took place) in a friendly atmosphere." "(The other party) has shown great interest in our arguments," he said, "also taking into account the EU's great interest in the EU-Turkey customs agreement..." During the meeting, Mr. Michaelides gave Mr. von Pletz a "strategic pre-accession scheme" aiming at speeding up procedures, through a host of political and economic measures, between the time of accession commencement to the time of their conclusion. The same strategic plan has been handed to the French Presidency. Mr. Michaelides said the timetable should be clear and bear no association with the Cyprus' problem political solution, "if commencement negotiations between Cyprus and the EU are ever to become a catalyst in the solution of the Cyprus problem." Mr. von Pletz had a meeting Wednesday with Athens Ambassador to Bonn Yianni Bourlogianni-Tsagaridis while Cyprus Ambassador to Germany Andrew Nicolaidis met Wednesday with former foreign minister Hans Dietrich Genscher. In Bonn, the Greens party stated their intention to oppose a customs agreement between the European Union and Turkey, independent of a possible "gentlemen's agreement" providing a timetable for the commencement of talks for a Cyprus accession. "If human rights issues are not first straightened out with Ankara, we will not agree to the customs union between Turkey and the EU when the issue is raised before the European Parliament," party leader Claudia Rott said. In Athens, main opposition New Democracy party spokesman Vassilis Manginas yesterday criticised the government for being "unable to deal with national issues effectively," stressing that Greece "is absent from crucial international meetings for our national issues, such as yesterday's (Wednesday's) five-party London meeting on EU relations with Turkey." Mr. Manginas described Greece's absence from the meeting as "international marginalisation" of the country. Political Spring party spokesman Akis Gerontopoulos said Greece had become "a second-rate state" within the European Union, referring to Greece's absence from the five-party meeting. Mr. Gerontopoulos called on the government to consider its responsibilities, stressing that "Greece's exclusion from the meeting, following its exclusion from the troika, signals its degrading."