Turkish threat to freeze EU-ties over Cyprus

Deputy PM says relations with bloc, which Ankara is hoping to join, will stop if rotating presidency goes to island.

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 Besir Atalay said relations with the EU will come to a ‘sudden halt’ if the bloc’s rotating presidency goes to Cyprus [EPA]

Turkey will freeze relations with the European Union if Cyprus is given the EU presidency in 2012, Besir Atalay, the deputy prime minister, has said.

Atalay made the threat late on Saturday in comments quoted by the state-run news agency Anatolian at the end of a trip to Turkish-occupied northern Cyprus.

“If the peace negotiations there [Cyprus] are not conclusive, and the EU gives its rotating presidency to southern Cyprus, the real crisis will be between Turkey and the EU,” Anatolian quoted Atalay as telling Turkish Cypriot Bayrak Radio and TV.
   
“Because we will then freeze our relations with the EU. We have made this announcement, as a government we have made this decision. Our relations with the EU will come to a sudden halt.”

Ankara began accession talks to the EU in 2005 and the comments – the strongest yet by Ankara over its opposition to the Cyprus presidency – could mark the start of a new low point with the 27-member bloc.

The comments also come at a time of heightened tension in the eastern Mediterranean where Turkey is locked in a row with Cyprus over potential offshore gas deposits.

Turkey’s relations with one-time ally Israel are also at a low.
   
The internationally-recognised Greek Cypriot government is due to take on the six-month rotating EU presidency in July 2012.

Greek-inspired coup
   
Cyprus has been divided since a Turkish invasion in 1974 triggered by a brief Greek-inspired coup.

UN-sponsored peace talks between Turkish Cypriots and Greek Cypriots have stumbled since they were relaunched in 2008.
   
In July, Turkey’s EU minister said freezing ties with the Greek Cypriot EU presidency was “an option” but Atalay’s comments were the first time Ankara has said it would definitely halt relations.
   
Greek Cypriots represent the island internationally and in the EU, while Turkey is the only country to recognise the Turkish Cypriot state.

Greek Cypriots say Turkey cannot join the EU until the Cyprus conflict is resolved.
   
The rotating presidency has lost some importance since the EU’s Lisbon treaty, which established a permanent head of the European Council that groups national governments, and a new foreign and security policy chief.

But a determined country can still shape the agenda.
   
Of the 35 “chapters” – policy areas of EU law – Turkey has completed one, and 18 have been frozen because of opposition by EU member states including Cyprus and France.

Source: News Agencies