A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, December 1, 2015
Turkey and EU agree to a $3bn refugee aid deal
Ankara's bid for membership of the EU will be kickstarted in return for its cooperation in preventing the 2.2 million Syrian refugees it hosts from coming to Europe
Ankara's bid for membership of the EU will be kickstarted in return for its cooperation in preventing the 2.2 million Syrian refugees it hosts from coming to Europe
Turkey currently hosts over 2 million Syrian refugees (AA)
Turkey and the European Union agreed at a summit on Sunday on a
"historic" three-billion-euro ($3.2 billion) aid deal to stem the flow
of Syrian refugees and other migrants to Europe.
Ankara will try to stem flow of refugees hailing from Syria migrating to
Europe while Turkey's bid for for EU membership will be kickstarted, EU
president Donald Tusk said.
Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said it was a "historic day" and
vowed that his country would keep its promises, in the face of
scepticism from some countries in the 28-member EU.
"We expect a major step towards changing the rules of the game when it
comes to stemming the migration flow that is coming to the EU via
Turkey," Tusk told a press conference with Davutoglu and European
Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker.
"We will also step up our assistance to Syrian refugees in Turkey
through a new Refugee Facility of three billion euros," the former
Polish premier added.
Turkey's progress in meeting the terms on the deal would be reviewed at least once a month, Tusk said.
A long history of wariness between Brussels and Ankara, coupled with
European concerns over human rights and Turkey's role in the Syrian
conflict, including the shooting down of a Russian warplane in the last
week, made the negotiations difficult.
Juncker insisted that the three billion euros "are not being given with no strings attached".
He also added that despite the deal "we have not forgotten the
differences that still remain with Turkey over human rights and freedom
of the press, and we will return to them".
Two Turkish journalists charged with "spying" over their reports about
Ankara's alleged arms supplies to Syrian rebels had urged the EU on
Saturday not to compromise on rights at the summit.
Davutoglu, who was standing in for Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan, said the deal would "re-energise" Turkey's EU accession
process, which has made little headway since it started in 2005.
"This is a historic day and a historic meeting, the first meeting of this kind since 11 years," the Turkish premier added.
"Turkey will be fulfilling all the promises of the joint plan," he said,
adding that "this three billion euros is to be spent for refugees in
Turkey, it's not for Turkey."
Turkey will try to stem the flow of refugees migrating to Europe through naval patrols and border checks.
"Results must be achieved in particular in stemming the influx of irregular migrants," a joint Turkish-EU statement read.
"Both sides will, as agreed and with immediate effect, step up their
active cooperation on migrants who are not in need of international
protection, preventing travel to Turkey and the EU ... and swiftly
returning migrants who are not in need of international protection to
their countries of origin."
Fuelled by the Syrian war, some 850,000 people have entered the EU this
year and more than 3,500 have died or gone missing in what has become
Europe's worst refugee crisis since World War II.
Turkey is the main gateway for migrants and refugees to reach Europe,
and Germany has pushed for the summit as it is the main destination for
most of the people arriving in the bloc.
Under the agreement, Turkey plans to take steps including cracking down
on traffickers and cooperating with the EU on the return of people who
do not qualify as refugees.
Turkey will meanwhile get its wish for the acceleration of its bid for
membership of the EU, with only one of 35 so-called "chapters" in the
accession process completed in a decade of stop-start talks.
The EU agreed to open Chapter 17 of Turkey's accession process -
covering economic and monetary policy - by mid-December. It also agreed
to have two summits with Turkey each year.
But the summit conclusions deliberately left future steps vague, saying
that preparations for the opening of further chapters would start in the
first three months of 2016, but dropping a mention of five chapters
that had appeared in an earlier draft.
Brussels also committed to easing the rules for visas to visit the EU's
Schengen passport-free area by October 2016, a major demand by Ankara.
The talks were complicated by resistance in particular by Cyprus, due to
decades of tensions with Turkey on the divided east Mediterranean
island.
The case for cooperation with Turkey comes against a backdrop of growing
security concerns over the migrant crisis, especially after the
November 13 attacks in Paris, claimed by the Islamic State group (IS),
which left 130 people dead.