The European Committee of the Regions' (CoR)
Working Group on relations with Türkiye
met on 4 December in Melikgazi/Kayseri to discuss developments in EU-Türkiye relations and explore ways to strengthen local cooperation on climate change and sustainable development.
The
meeting
was hosted by Hacı Mustafa Palancioğlu (AK Party), mayor of
Melikgazi/Kayseri, a municipality in a region heavily affected by the
devastating earthquake that struck south-eastern Turkiye in March 2023,
causing widespread damage, loss of life, and displacement.
Discussions on the UN Sustainable Development Goals focused on the need to
increase action at the local level, reflecting
UN warnings
this year that progress towards many of the 17 targets for 2030 is weak and
insufficient.
Participants emphasised the importance of continued dialogue between
European and Turkish local and regional representatives, despite challenges
in EU-Türkiye relations and a standstill in negotiations on Türkiye's
accession to the EU. On 29 November, the European Commission and the EU's
High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy issued a
communication suggesting ways of reviving relations.
Antje Grotheer
(DE/PES), president of Bremen City Parliament and chair of the Working
Group Türkiye said:
"EU clearly has a strategic interest to develop a mutually beneficial
relationship with Türkiye. We, local and regional politicians, through
our city diplomacy, cultural, economic and political ties should
actively sustain the current trend to turn confrontation into
cooperation. There are many opportunities and challenges to face
together, such as trade, migration, education, climate change, energy
transition, to name just a few. The dialogue on local democracy, rule
of law and fundamental rights will remain an integral part of the
EU-Türkiye relationship, and any positive agenda should be linked to a
genuine improvement of democracy."
Speakers at the meeting included
Nacho Sánchez Amor, the European Parliament's rapporteur on Türkiye. In September 2023, the
European Parliament called on the EU and Türkiye "to break the current
stalemate and move towards a closer partnership" and for a "realistic
framework for EU-Türkiye relations".
The EU's 29 November communication proposed, among other things: a
resumption of negotiations on the modernisation of the Customs Union, a
1995 trade agreement that allows goods to move freely between Türkiye and
EU without tariffs or quotas; visa facilitation; and the resumption of a
series of high-level meetings suspended in 2019.
At the level of local government, the CoR reiterated its concerns about the
continued pressure applied to mayors from opposition parties by Türkiye's
ruling coalition government and called for the next local elections, due to
be held in March 2024, to be free and transparent.