Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

TARGET 2016 How Turkey gets to Visa liberalization.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "TARGET 2016 How Turkey gets to Visa liberalization."— Presentation transcript:

1 TARGET 2016 How Turkey gets to Visa liberalization

2 A new momentum? December 2013Visa liberalisation process March 2014Court decision (Berlin) April 2014Moldovans travel visa free May 2014 Progress in Georgia and Ukraine …

3 Association Agreement (1963) “to promote the continuous and balanced strengthening of trade and economic relations between the Parties.”

4 What is this relationship to the young?

5 Turkey’s young generation – 31 million Who are they?

6 People to people contact: huge untapped potential

7 New momentum I: European Court of Justice Soysal decision (2009) - Demirkan decision (2013)

8 Who can travel visa free today? A ProtocolA Protocol to the 1963 EU-Turkey Association Agreement prevents both parties "from introducing between themselves any new restriction on the freedom of establishment and the freedom to provide services."1963 EU-Turkey Association Agreement 2009 Soysal case2009 Soysal case: German visa requirement for Turkish citizens is a "new restriction" - it did not exist in 1973 when the protocol entered into force. Other EU member states are also affected. So far only the Netherlands and Denmark have lifted the visa requirement for Turkish service providers.

9 New momentum II: regional court Berlin- Brandenburg (decision 26 March 2014)

10 Another crack in the wall Turkish businesspeople have “the right to enter Germany without a visa to provide services to persons within the framework of their business activities.” Categories of Turkish service providers who can enter Germany visa-free so far: truck drivers, members of ship and airplane crews, mechanics repairing machinery in Germany, artists, scientists and professional sportspeople. Now needs to be expanded.

11 New momentum III: Moldova visa free travel From end April 2014

12 New momentum IV: Visa liberalization process December 2013

13 The roadmap approach – concrete standards

14 What worked in the Balkans and for Moldova: security partnership arguments leaders address EU fears directly human rights and asylum arguments Civil society pushing leaders to focus (Serbia 2009 vs. Bosnia 2009)

15 Roadmaps and scorecards – strict and fair

16

17 Who to persuade?

18 Apprehensions of illegal immigrants at Greek-Turkish land border per month, for 2012-2013

19 The second concern: asylum (2012) 1 Afghanistan28 010 2 Russia24 280 3 Syria 24 110 4 Pakistan19 695 5 Serbia19 065 6 Somalia14 265 7 Iran13 585 8 Iraq13 175 9 Georgia10 830 10 Kosovo10 210 TOTAL Non-EU335 380

20 Recognition rates in EU first instance (2012) (Refugee status and subsidiary protection) Syria – 90 percent Iran – 47 percent Russia (Chechens) – 19 percent Azerbaijan – 14 percent Turkey – 12 percent Pakistan – 9 percent Ukraine – 5 percent Moldova – 2.8 percent Macedonia – 0.4 percent IMPORTANCE: HUMAN RIGHTS AND NON DISCRIMINATION

21 Turkey: visa and human rights (Block 4) “Revise … the legal framework … so as to ensure the right to liberty and security, the right to a fair trial and freedom of expression, of assembly and association in practice.”

22 Another lesson from Moldova – visa and non- discrimination

23 How to get to 234? Turkey secures the support of Italy, Poland, Romania, Spain and Sweden A large number of smaller member states: Bulgaria, Croatia (to join on 1 July 2013), Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Greece, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Portugal, Slovakia and Slovenia; The support of Germany. Votes of Austria, Cyprus, Luxembourg, France and the Netherlands are not needed

24 Target date 2016? A matter of trust

25 Building trust: what member states can do

26 Dialogue on Justice and Home Affairs commits Turkey and the EU to "fully exploit all possibilities provided by the EU Visa Code and other legal instruments to further facilitate the access of Turkish citizens to the EU."

27 “Trust and Travel”: Concrete goals for 2014 - reduce rejection rates to less than 2 percent; - more than 90 percent long-term multiple entry visa; - reduce costs in line; -solve the Erasmus student visa problem All in compliance with existing EU visa rules

28 Reduce rejection rates EU member state Applications rejected (%) Applications received Belgium13.211,526 Sweden10.28,831 Germany8.3167,263 Netherlands7.445,535 Austria6.714,305 Czech Republic4.821,689 Poland4.66,904 France4.098,333 Spain2.439,029 Greece0.992,992 Italy0.8115,785 Hungary0.810,483 All Schengen countries4.7668,835 Rejection rates of short-stay visa applications in Turkey 2012 [3] [3]

29 A positive trend EU Member State 201020112012 Belgium34.314.313.2 Sweden10.711.610.2 Germany13.59.68.3 Netherlands7.37.07.4 Austria12.99.76.7 Czech Republic5.87.24.8 Poland7.64.14.6 France4.23.44.0 Spain0.72.4 Greece0.70.50.9 Italy1.2 0.8 Hungary2.51.40.8 All Schengen countries6.45.24.7 Rejection rates of short-stay visa in Turkey 2010 to 2012 (%) [4] [4]

30 Multiple-entry visa 2012 Visa-issuing country Percentage of MEVs Austria99 Italy97 Greece88 Netherlands77 Poland76 Sweden66 Hungary32 Belgium31 Czech Republic26 France19 Germany17 Spain5 All Schengen50 MEVs among short-stay visas issued in Turkey in 2012 [8] [8]

31 Multiple-entry visa – another positive trend MEVs among short-stay visas issued in Turkey in 2012 [8] [8] 201020112012 In Turkey343750 Globally343942 Share of MEVs among short-stay visas issued by Schengen countries [10] [10]

32 Waiving the Schengen visa fee MEVs among short-stay visas issued in Turkey in 2012 [8] [8] Share of MEVs among short-stay visas issued by Schengen countries [10] [10] Categories for which the visa fee may be waived: "(a) children from the age of six years and below the age of 12 years; (b) holders of diplomatic and service passports; (c) participants aged 25 years or less in seminars, conferences, sports, cultural or educational events, organised by non-profit organisations."

33 Finnish example Multiple entry – valid up to 5 years Within 5 business days

34

35 Trust and Travel www.whitelistproject.eu


Download ppt "TARGET 2016 How Turkey gets to Visa liberalization."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google