Turkey will bring up the Customs Union deal for negotiation with the
European Union by June, Economy Minister Nihat Zeybekçi has announced.
The
move comes amid Ankara’s mounting frustration with the accord,
particularly after Brussels recently kicked off the free trade deal
process with Washington.
"By June, we’re going to re-open for
negotiation the Customs Union Agreement, to which no sovereign
independent state should agree,” Zeybekçi said March 23, speaking with
local businessmen in the southern province of Burdur.
"I was with
economy and trade ministers and delegations of 28 EU member countries. I
pressured these men about the Customs Union … We met three times and
we’re now going to get together for a fourth time,” he said.
Critics
of the accord that was agreed in 1996, including Zeybekçi’s predecessor
Zafer Çağlayan, say it restricts Turkey’s export competitiveness. This
is because the bloc is able to enter into free-trade agreements with
other nations that are binding for Ankara, without the Turks having a
say.
The Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership, for
which negotiations have started between the United States and the
European Union, is the latest such agreement to deal a blow to Turkey,
causing the resentment of many local exporters.
Free trade deals
between the EU and third parties enable other countries’ goods to enter
Turkish markets via Europe with zero duties, but the decision to provide
the same privileges to Turkey is up to the third party.
(hurriyetdailynews.com)