EU to press ahead with plan to grant visa-free travel to Turkish citizens
Pavitra Dwibhashyam
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan with German Chancellor Angela Merkel
Reuters
The European Commission is set to implement a plan to grant Turkish citizens visa-free travel
facility to Europe. Barring a last minute complication, the commission
will announce on 4 May that Turkey has largely met the benchmarks set
for the visa liberalisation, Reuters reports. The commission will ask
the European Parliament and EU governments to approve the legislation by
the end of June, several EU sources told Reuters.
A senior EU official, who is clued in to the negotiations between
Turkey and the EU, said: "We have not lowered our standards. Turkey has
raised its game."
The EU proposed 72 criteria to be fulfilled by Turkey by the
deadline on Wednesday which include passport security, migration
management, public order, human rights and readmission of irregular
migrants. According to media reports,
Turkey has met most of the criteria required but not all of them. The
final decision on Turks travelling visa-free by the end of June will
depend on the 28 country leaders who are members of the EU.
The deal EU made with Turkey on 18 March was a turning point in the
refugee crisis and has significantly decreased the number of refugees
coming into Europe. The EU risks collapse of the deal if it doesn't go
ahead with the visa liberalisation, Politico says.
"The feeling of lack of trust on the visa [liberalisation] and on the
camps [for refugees] is widespread. No one believes in it but we cannot
say it openly because there is no alternative," an EU diplomat told
Politico.
"This is a great opportunity for Europe to show it is a reliable
partner and make it clear that they don't apply double standards when it
comes to predominantly Muslim European nations such as Turkey," a
Turkish government official said.
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