In his article, titled "Erdogan's draconian new law demolishes Turkey's EU ambitions," Tisdall condemned the adoption of this law, which he claimed has destroyed any remaining illusions that Turkey is currently "a fully functioning, western-style democracy."
By signing the document, Erdogan, who called the EU a "Christian club," actually indicated that Turkey has missed its opportunity to enter the EU in the foreseeable future, according to the author.
"Critics say he may also have sounded the death knell for Turkey’s secular democracy and set the stage for intensified armed conflict with Kurdish groups," Tisdall said.
He recalled that Erdogan's introduction of the law came amid "heightened violence between Turkey’s security forces and militants belonging to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) and its radical offshoots."
Separately, Tisdall referred to "the already shaking" migrant deal between Ankara and the EU, which he warned may affect Turkey's EU ambitions.
"If it collapses — and Turkey is threatening to scrap it — the EU will have even less incentive to advance accession negotiations. Leading EU countries such as France and Germany strongly oppose Turkish membership and have, in any case, indicated they could ultimately use their veto, if necessary, to prevent it," he pointed out.
#Farage knows Turkey wld only be allowed to join #EU if it respects law,human rights,democracy. Fat chance of that as Erdogan tightens grip
— Philip C James (@PhilipCJames) 10 июня 2016 г.
Last week, the Turkish parliament approved the scrapping of theirown immunity to legal prosecution via a secret ballot, allowing the bill to be implemented without need for a public referendum.
Whilst Erdogan is in charge, Turkey will never meet the human rights requirements for EU entry. Once he's gone, and if they do, why not?
— (((Paul Bernal))) (@PaulbernalUK) 8 июня 2016 г.
The law, which came amid repeated allegations of human right violations in Turkey, is ostensibly aimed against those Turkish lawmakers who support the Kurds and the PKK, which is seen by Erdogan's government as a terrorist organization.
In March, Brussels and Ankara agreed on a deal under which Turkey pledged to take back all undocumented migrants who arrive in the European Union through its territory in exchange for sending Syrian refugees who were accommodated legally in Turkey. In return, the bloc pledged to accelerate the Turkish EU accession bid and introduce a visa-free regime.