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Turkey’s Erdogan faces tough EU talks on refugees, Syria

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Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan meets EU leaders Monday but they will find it hard to bridge gaps on the migrant crisis and the Syrian war that has produced so many of the refugees they must both deal with, analysts say.

Russian air strikes in Syria have upped the ante in a conflict which has destabilised a region in which Ankara plays a pivotal role, with Turkey taking around two million refugees from Syria.

Erdogan faces crunch elections on November 1 and analysts say he will want some solid signs of progress to take home without giving ground in his implacable campaign against Kurdish rebels.

For the European Union, the focus will be on getting Turkey to do more to halt the flow of migrants making the dangerous crossing to Greece, with more than 500,000 having made it to Europe's shores this year.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan delivers a speech to lawmakers in Ankara  on October 1  2015
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan delivers a speech to lawmakers in Ankara, on October 1, 2015
Adem Altan, AFP

Against this complex backdrop, analysts say Erdogan and his hosts, EU President Donald Tusk and European Commission head Jean-Claude Juncker, will be looking to strike a delicate balance between two sides who have little option but to work together.

"In this massive exodus, driven by the Syrian conflict and now added to by the Russian military intervention which makes people feel things can only get worse, Turkey and the EU are in the same boat," said Marc Pierini of the Carnegie Europe think-tank in Brussels.

"It is destabilising for them and it is destabilising for the EU," Pierini told AFP.

- 'Something new and special' -

Monday's talks will be yet another attempt to "reset" ties between Brussels and a leader it has repeatedly criticised for human rights issues.

Migrants and refugees waiting at the Esenler Bus Terminal  Istanbul  for buses to the Turkish-Greek ...
Migrants and refugees waiting at the Esenler Bus Terminal, Istanbul, for buses to the Turkish-Greek border
Yasin Akgul, AFP/File

Harsh words have been spoken recently, with Erdogan accusing the EU of turning the Mediterranean into a "cemetery" after global outrage erupted over pictures of Aylan Kurdi, a drowned Syrian Kurdish toddler whose body was washed up on a Turkish beach.

The Turkish leader took a softer tone this week, telling parliament he wanted to open a "new page" and saying Ankara still wanted to join the European Union despite Brussels effectively closing the doors to all newcomers until 2020.

"We are carrying on with our efforts for full membership of the EU as we struggle to find solutions to the problems we are facing in our region," Erdogan told parliament Thursday.

One answer to the migrant crisis is more aid for Turkey, and EU leaders agreed at an emergency migrant summit last week to offer just that to Ankara as well as other countries in the region.

But the EU believes Ankara could do more to tackle what it says is some 30,000 people smugglers in Turkey.

Migrants queue to get food at a site dubbed the
Migrants queue to get food at a site dubbed the "New Jungle", where some 3,000 people have set up camp -- most seeking desperately to get to England, in Calais on September 19, 2015
Philippe Huguen, AFP/File

It also wants to set up "hotspots" for registering asylum seekers on Turkish soil, but Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu recently ruled that out.

However Erdogan, who last visited Brussels in 2014, is looking for new ways of tackling the problem.

"Erdogan wants some new agreement on assistance for the refugees, something new and special, not something coming out of existing aid for Turkey," said Ian Lesser, director of the German Marshall Fund think-tank in Brussels.

- 'Safe zone' and Kurdish issue -

The Turkish president in particular pushed hard during a recent visit by Tusk on plans for a "safe zone" for civilians in northern Syria.

In Brussels the suspicion is that this is less about people fleeing for their lives and more about Turkey's political strategy in the region -- particularly its campaign against the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK).

An armed Kurdish militant of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) wearing a mask and a scarf cove...
An armed Kurdish militant of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) wearing a mask and a scarf covering his head flashes the "V for Victory" sign during clashes with Turkish forces on September 28, 2015, at Bismil, in Diyarbakir
Ilyas Akengin, AFP

While the EU deems the PKK a terrorist organisation, it was disappointed to see Erdogan focus his attention on the Kurds rather than the Islamic State group, despite saying he would launch air strikes on both after a bloody bomb attack near the Syrian border in July.

That torpedoed a 2013 truce between Turkey and the Kurds that the EU would like to see restored.

"He is going to have some explaining to do on this," said Lesser of the German Marshall Fund.

"Turkey is once again looking for support but the EU and the United States are dismayed by how the fight against IS has turned into a fight against the PKK."

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan meets EU leaders Monday but they will find it hard to bridge gaps on the migrant crisis and the Syrian war that has produced so many of the refugees they must both deal with, analysts say.

Russian air strikes in Syria have upped the ante in a conflict which has destabilised a region in which Ankara plays a pivotal role, with Turkey taking around two million refugees from Syria.

Erdogan faces crunch elections on November 1 and analysts say he will want some solid signs of progress to take home without giving ground in his implacable campaign against Kurdish rebels.

For the European Union, the focus will be on getting Turkey to do more to halt the flow of migrants making the dangerous crossing to Greece, with more than 500,000 having made it to Europe’s shores this year.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan delivers a speech to lawmakers in Ankara  on October 1  2015

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan delivers a speech to lawmakers in Ankara, on October 1, 2015
Adem Altan, AFP

Against this complex backdrop, analysts say Erdogan and his hosts, EU President Donald Tusk and European Commission head Jean-Claude Juncker, will be looking to strike a delicate balance between two sides who have little option but to work together.

“In this massive exodus, driven by the Syrian conflict and now added to by the Russian military intervention which makes people feel things can only get worse, Turkey and the EU are in the same boat,” said Marc Pierini of the Carnegie Europe think-tank in Brussels.

“It is destabilising for them and it is destabilising for the EU,” Pierini told AFP.

– ‘Something new and special’ –

Monday’s talks will be yet another attempt to “reset” ties between Brussels and a leader it has repeatedly criticised for human rights issues.

Migrants and refugees waiting at the Esenler Bus Terminal  Istanbul  for buses to the Turkish-Greek ...

Migrants and refugees waiting at the Esenler Bus Terminal, Istanbul, for buses to the Turkish-Greek border
Yasin Akgul, AFP/File

Harsh words have been spoken recently, with Erdogan accusing the EU of turning the Mediterranean into a “cemetery” after global outrage erupted over pictures of Aylan Kurdi, a drowned Syrian Kurdish toddler whose body was washed up on a Turkish beach.

The Turkish leader took a softer tone this week, telling parliament he wanted to open a “new page” and saying Ankara still wanted to join the European Union despite Brussels effectively closing the doors to all newcomers until 2020.

“We are carrying on with our efforts for full membership of the EU as we struggle to find solutions to the problems we are facing in our region,” Erdogan told parliament Thursday.

One answer to the migrant crisis is more aid for Turkey, and EU leaders agreed at an emergency migrant summit last week to offer just that to Ankara as well as other countries in the region.

But the EU believes Ankara could do more to tackle what it says is some 30,000 people smugglers in Turkey.

Migrants queue to get food at a site dubbed the

Migrants queue to get food at a site dubbed the “New Jungle”, where some 3,000 people have set up camp — most seeking desperately to get to England, in Calais on September 19, 2015
Philippe Huguen, AFP/File

It also wants to set up “hotspots” for registering asylum seekers on Turkish soil, but Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu recently ruled that out.

However Erdogan, who last visited Brussels in 2014, is looking for new ways of tackling the problem.

“Erdogan wants some new agreement on assistance for the refugees, something new and special, not something coming out of existing aid for Turkey,” said Ian Lesser, director of the German Marshall Fund think-tank in Brussels.

– ‘Safe zone’ and Kurdish issue –

The Turkish president in particular pushed hard during a recent visit by Tusk on plans for a “safe zone” for civilians in northern Syria.

In Brussels the suspicion is that this is less about people fleeing for their lives and more about Turkey’s political strategy in the region — particularly its campaign against the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

An armed Kurdish militant of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) wearing a mask and a scarf cove...

An armed Kurdish militant of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) wearing a mask and a scarf covering his head flashes the “V for Victory” sign during clashes with Turkish forces on September 28, 2015, at Bismil, in Diyarbakir
Ilyas Akengin, AFP

While the EU deems the PKK a terrorist organisation, it was disappointed to see Erdogan focus his attention on the Kurds rather than the Islamic State group, despite saying he would launch air strikes on both after a bloody bomb attack near the Syrian border in July.

That torpedoed a 2013 truce between Turkey and the Kurds that the EU would like to see restored.

“He is going to have some explaining to do on this,” said Lesser of the German Marshall Fund.

“Turkey is once again looking for support but the EU and the United States are dismayed by how the fight against IS has turned into a fight against the PKK.”

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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