By Handan Kazanci
ISTANBUL (AA) – Turkiye and the European Union vowed to boost long-stalled relations on Thursday during a high-level parliamentary meeting held for the first time in three years in Brussels.
The Turkiye-EU Joint Parliamentary Committee meeting was held at the European Parliament. The last such meeting was held in the Turkish capital Ankara on Dec. 19, 2018.
Speaking at the meeting, co-chair of the EU-Turkiye Committee, Emrah Karayel, a lawmaker of Justice and Development (AK) Party, welcomed the reconvening of the commission after the EP elections in 2019.
Noting that they will first discuss the accession negotiations at the meeting, Karayel said the negotiations were “the backbone” of Turkiye-EU relations.
“Unfortunately, since the beginning of the negotiations, it has been highly politicized by some member states and has been used for their national interests,” he added.
“We expect the EU to act as a reliable international actor and to support Turkiye in its EU journey,” he said.” Without the perspective of participation, it is impossible to expect the true potential of our relationships to unfold.”
Karayel stressed the need to update the Customs Union, the importance of Turkiye in the global supply chain, and what Turkiye should do in the European Green Deal.
Stating that it is extremely necessary for the EU to take sincere and concrete steps in its relations with Turkiye in the upcoming period, he said: “We hope that the European Parliament, which we always see as a key partner, will take supportive steps in this regard.”
“It is clear that a constructive approach will benefit both parties,” he added.
- Time to 'start anew'
For his part, co-chair of the EU-Turkiye Committee Sergey Lagodinsky said: “We are very pleased with this fresh start of the inter-parliamentary relations between EU and Turkey.”
“This meeting finally takes place after three years of hard work and waiting on both sides,” said Lagodinsky, who is also a German politician.
Stating that the joint parliamentary committee is the main body of inter-parliamentary cooperation, he said it is also the “backbone of our bilateral relations.”
“No matter what the differences in our opinions are and what the challenges are, we will keep trying, and we will keep building bridges,” he added.
“Turkey is and remains our important partner. Turkey is and remains a candidate country to the EU. Nothing changed about that,” he said.
“Turkey remains a historical neighbor being a founding member of the Council of Europe, being a signatory to a number of relevant international conventions, on democracy, on rule of law, on climate and many other issues,” he added.
On recent stalled talks between Turkiye and the EU, he said: “We have sensed a sense of growing distance between the European Union and Turkey during the past few years. And I think now is the chance to bridge those gaps, to build those bridges, to start anew, and to start a rapprochement on both sides.”
Turkiye applied for EU membership in 1987 and accession talks began in 2005. The negotiations, however, stalled in 2007 due to objections raised by the Greek Cypriot administration and opposition from Germany and France.
“But this rapprochement does not only mean economic ties, they are important, that does not only mean military cooperation, which is extremely important, especially today's, it means also looking for building bridges in terms of our values of what is our orientation in this world, which is so difficult and so aggressive.
"We are ready to boost our mutual engagement," he said.
"The EU is ready to boost our mutual engagement in a number of common interests and common areas," he continued.
"We want to align Turkey and EU in the green transition, this is a necessity which is also economical," he said.
"We want to intensify dialogue on climate change, health, migration, counterterrorism and also the economy," he added.
Lagodinsky also praised Turkiye's "recent efforts to normalize its position and its relations with a number of countries in the region."
Just over the last week, Turkiye's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan hosted his Israeli counterpart Isaac Herzog and Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis in Turkiye.
A high level meeting between Sergey Lavrov and Dmytro Kuleba, the foreign ministers of Russia and Ukraine, was hosted by Turkiye’s Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu in Antalya last week. The talks were the first high-level interaction between Russia and Ukraine since the war began on Feb. 24.
EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell also told Turkish media over the weekend that Ankara has played a “key role” in the global push to resolve the conflict.