Blocking Turkey's progress towards European Union entry at a key December summit wouldn't be in the interests of long-term rival Cyprus, the Cypriot foreign minister said Wednesday.

Blocking Turkey's progress towards European Union entry at a key December summit wouldn't be in the interests of long-term rival Cyprus, the Cypriot foreign minister said Wednesday.

"As the situation stands today, we deem it wouldn't be in our interest to halt Turkey's accession process," Foreign Minister Markos Kyprianou said.

"Naturally, this doesn't mean it will happen unconditionally and carte blanche. This is the fine line we are aiming to reach in December," he told a news conference during a one-day visit to Athens.

Turkey began EU membership negotiations in 2005, but has so far opened talks in only 11 of the 35 policy areas that candidates must complete, while France, Germany and other member states have sought to slow or halt the process. Questions of EU enlargement must, in almost all cases, be resolved with unanimous agreement.

The Turkish Cypriots and Turkey worry the Greek Cypriots are deliberately protracting the talks and accuse them of impeding progress in Turkey's EU bid in order to extract concessions on the Cyprus conflict.

Cyprus has been divided since 1974 when Turkey occupied the north in response to an Greek-engineered coup aimed at uniting the island with Greece. U.N.-brokered peace talks in Cyprus began in September 2008, but progress has been slow and the two sides remain deeply divided on key issues.

"We are waiting for real gestures from Turkey, not just expressions of intent," Kyprianou said Wednesday. "There are no additional obligations compared to other candidate states. In contrast, Turkey had a more lenient treatment when the procedure began and for this reason had more ground to cover.

"Turkey must show its compliance [in December] or repercussions cannot be avoided," Kyprianou said. "We want a European Turkey...not just a Turkey operating as a guest within the EU, as is perhaps its goal."