Turkey on charm offensive to ease tensions with EU

Turkey on charm offensive to ease tensions with EU
Mevlut Cavusoglu and Josep Borrell have met to discuss Turkey's EU membership and issues related to the eastern Mediterranean.
2 min read
Turkey has been trying to secure EU membership for more than 15 years. [Getty]

Turkey on Thursday launched a new effort to get its strained relations with the European Union back on track, as the country's foreign minister visited Brussels looking to talk about migration and plan a series of high-level talks with the 27-nation bloc.

Turkey has been a candidate to join the EU for more than 15 years, but its membership quest is at a standstill.

Tensions are high over Ankara's role in the conflicts in Syria and Libya, the divided island of Cyprus - an EU member country - and its energy exploration in the Mediterranean Sea.

The EU relies heavily on Turkey to stop migrants from entering its borders.

Well over one million people entered Europe in 2015, most of them Syrian refugees landing on the Greek islands, sparking a major political crisis.

The EU has paid billions of euros in refugee support for Ankara to halt the flow, and it has worked.

At a meeting with EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell, Turkish foreign minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said they would discuss a joint "migration declaration" that Turkey is proposing.

"We will also tackle important issues such as visa liberalization, modernization of the customs union and other concrete steps which will build the future of Turkey and EU together," Cavusoglu said, referring to other incentives the EU has offered Ankara if it prevents migrants leaving for Europe.

The two sides were also preparing for a conference on developments in the eastern Mediterranean, where Turkish and Greek warships have faced off in recent months, Cavusoglu added.

Already last month the EU said it plans to spend around 485 million euros ($590 million) over the next year helping refugees living in Turkey, by providing cash assistance to people to meet their basic needs and money transfers to help educate children.

Turkey is home to almost four million refugees.

Around 70% of them are women and children and the overwhelming majority of people live outside migrant camps.

Read more: How EU sanctions on Turkey reveal a divided Europe

Cavusoglu conceded that "2020 was a problematic year" for EU-Turkey ties.

He said it's important now "to create a positive atmosphere and a positive agenda."

Borrell noted a recent "improvement in the overall atmosphere," including an agreement on talks between Ankara and Athens, and he said that boosting flagging EU-Turkey ties is of "mutual strategic interest."

Their meeting was also aimed at setting up a visit to Turkey by top EU officials.

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