EU, Turkey admit delay in visa-free travel

Turkey’s EU minister has admitted there is no chance of completing a deal on visa-free travel to the European Union
by a July 1 deadline, as the EU’s interior ministers demanded once more
during a June 10 meeting in Luxembourg that Turkey change its
anti-terror law.

The EU agreed in March to offer Turkey visa-free access by July 1, increased aid and accelerated accession talks in return for Ankara controlling the flood of migrants crossing into Greece.

But
Turkey has yet to fulfill all of the conditions laid down by the
European Commission for the visa agreement, including changes to
Ankara’s anti-terrorism laws to meet EU concerns over human rights.

Turkish
European Affairs Minister Ömer Çelik admitted the July 1 deadline would
be missed in an interview late June 10 with Dutch broadcaster NOS,
during a visit to The Hague, which is the first official such
acknowledgement by Ankara.

“If we are realistic, we are not going to achieve this date,” he said.

Austrian Interior Minister Wolfgang Sobotka also said on June 10 that the July 1 deadline was not feasible.

“But we think it must happen as soon as possible,” the Turkish minister said.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said last month that the visa exemption must be introduced by October at the latest. Ankara has threatened to scrap the migrant deal with the EU altogether if visa-free travel is not awarded.

Çelik
said he believed Turkey had met all the necessary criteria and that
there was “no question of making any change that would reduce our
capacity to fight terrorism.”

Once Turkey has fulfilled the conditions, the European Parliament would still have to give its approval to the deal.

Meanwhile,
no official decisions were taken at the EU ministers’ meeting in
Luxembourg, but it was clear that the situation of visa-free travel for
Turkey did not seem to be changing soon, Deutsche Welle reported.

The
EU ministers believe that the conditions for visa-free travel have not
been fulfilled, while a European diplomat cited the current political
developments in Turkey, saying that it constituted an obstacle to
visa-free travel.

The diplomat, whose identity was not revealed,
said an immunity bill, which paves the way for the trial of 152
legislators, mostly from the Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP), and the
insults against German
MPs after the approval of a resolution declaring the World War I-era
killings of Anatolian Armenians at the hands of Ottomans as “genocide,”
show that “it’s not the right time for visa-free travel.”

In addition, the European Commission will present a new report on Ankara’s anti-terror law on June 14.

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