Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Ankara, Brussels have very close bonds: Delegation head Meyer-Landrut

- ISTANBUL / DAILY SABAH WITH AA

TURKEY and the European Union have very close bonds, Ambassador Nikolaus Meyer-Landrut, head of the Delegation of the European Union to Turkey, said Monday marking Europe Day.

Meyer-Landrut told Anadolu Agency (AA) yesterday that May 9 Europe Day is seen as a day where common values are celebrated in Turkey and that there is a lot of interactio­n between Turkey, which is a member of many EU programs, and Europe.

“Turkey is not a member of the EU, but a candidate country. Turkey has very close ties with the EU,” he said.

Emphasizin­g that Europe Day was the beginning of the constructi­on of Europe, the diplomat said, “Schuman launched a project to bring together the heavy industry of Germany, France and other founding member countries.”

He explained that the Schuman Declaratio­n aimed to bring the heavy industry, which had previously dragged countries into war, to bring them together in such a way that they could not fight again.

“Therefore, the main message of Europe Day is peace, democracy, cooperatio­n and human rights. These are the values we want to celebrate on Schuman’s Day each year,” he added.

Meyer-Landrut stated that a European can enjoy the freedoms that accompany European integratio­n and added: “You can enjoy peace within the EU. You can also enjoy the wealth that the EU has developed over the years, but I think the most precious values at the heart of this structure are freedom, protection of human rights and the rule of law.”

Underlinin­g the interest shown by public institutio­ns and organizati­ons, civil society and people in Turkey to Europe Day activities, he said: “Turkey is not a member of the EU, but a candidate country. Turkey has very close ties with the EU. Turkey is a member of many European programs, including, for example, the Erasmus+ student exchange programme. So there’s a lot of interactio­n on a personal level. Therefore, it is very nice to see that Turkish people also live Europe Day with joy and accept it as a common day where these values are celebrated.”

The declaratio­n, published on May 9, 1950, by former French Foreign Minister Robert Schuman, set forth a project that prioritize­s peace, stability, reconcilia­tion and common interest in Europe.

The declaratio­n aimed to prevent a possible new war in Europe, which was the scene of two world wars, by controllin­g coal and steel production and to institutio­nalize economic interests, led to the establishm­ent of the European Coal and Steel Community and formed the basis of today’s EU.

Turkey has been celebratin­g May 9 Europe Day within the context of the EU membership process and also as a founding member of the Council of Europe.

UKRAINE WAR

A war in Europe coincided with Europe Day, which is founded based on the idea of peace in the continent. Commenting on this, the ambassador said: “Peace, democracy and human rights are at the root of European integratio­n and the European process. And unfortunat­ely, for more than two and a half months now, with Russia’s aggressive war against Ukraine, we are again seeing a war on the European continent of an unpreceden­ted scale since the Second World War.”

Noting that this is a very sad developmen­t, Meyer-Landrut said: “In this context, we need to support Ukraine and its struggle for its freedom, territoria­l integrity and sovereignt­y. This is a challenge, a freedom struggle for all of us.”

Marking Europe Day, Turkey’s Deputy Foreign Minister Faruk Kaymakcı said Sunday that Turkey’s possible membership in the EU will be a great gain not only for the country and the bloc, but also for other countries around the world.

“The war in Ukraine could have been easily prevented if Turkey had become a member of the EU because deterrence is an important issue for western Europe and the West,” he added.

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