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  • EU rules out Ukraine entry

    The Times (London)
    December 10, 2004, Friday

    EU rules out Ukraine entry

    by Anthony Browne Brussels Correspondent


    HUNDREDS of thousands of Ukrainians have braved the snows of Kiev for
    two weeks to demand their right to join the West. But their country
    faces a certain rebuff by the European Union.

    Viktor Yushchenko, the pro-Western presidential candidate, said in an
    American newspaper interview yesterday that EU membership would be
    his top priority if he were elected on December 26.

    In Brussels, however, the European Commission said: "Our position has
    not changed.

    Membership is not on the agenda." Instead, the commission announced a
    partnership plan for greater co-operation with Ukraine to boost ties
    with its closest neighbours once it holds free and fair elections.

    Jean-Claude Juncker, Prime Minister of Luxembourg, who takes up the
    EU's rotating presidency next month, said: "I can only warn against
    offering Ukraine the prospect of full membership. We need a special
    relationship with Ukraine that does justice to its strategic
    importance."

    Ukraine's possible membership is an acutely awkward subject for
    European leaders.

    "We just try to avoid the question when asked. The fact that Ukraine
    never applied has made the decision easier but now it is far more
    difficult," said an EU diplomat. Although keen to support democracy
    in the largest country wholly in Europe, EU leaders are concerned
    that the bloc's inability to say no to potential members means that
    it is growing too big to control.

    The EU has just expanded to 25 members by accepting ten mainly poor
    Eastern European countries, among them Poland and Hungary. Bulgaria
    and Romania are joining in 2007, and Turkey, almost entirely in Asia,
    is already on track to become the biggest, and poorest, member in
    about another ten years. The Balkan states, such as Croatia and
    Macedonia, have also been accepted as potential members.

    Many politicians fear that the EU simply will not be able to cope
    with another country as poor, large and chaotic as Ukraine. Allowing
    Ukraine in would also open the door for other countries such as
    Belarus, Moldova, Georgia (which recently said that it wanted to
    join), Azerbaijan and Armenia, bringing the total to nearly 40
    countries.

    To control its expansion, the EU set an arbitrary official limit that
    its eastern border would be the western border of the former USSR,
    with the exception of the three Baltic states of Latvia, Lithuania
    and Estonia. Romano Prodi, the former President of the European
    Commission, said that Ukraine was as likely as New Zealand to become
    a member. But if Mr Yushchenko wins the election on December 26, the
    EU will probably be faced with irresistible pressure to let Ukraine
    join.

    The new Eastern European states, three of which have a border with
    Ukraine, are keen to curb instability on their doorstep by letting
    Ukraine in. An East European diplomat said: "We should not cut it
    off. People are asking, 'If Turkey can join, why not Ukraine?' It is
    clearly much closer to Europe."

    The British Government, which has always been a strong supporter of
    enlargement and is Turkey's main backer, is noncommittal on Ukraine.
    France, like Luxembourg, is strongly opposed, concerned that it will
    just turn the EU into a simple free trade zone.

    Charles Grant, director of the Centre for European Reform, said: "The
    fact that Turkey is joining means it is only a matter of time before
    Ukraine becomes a candidate.

    "There is no good reason for it not to join. The (commission policy)
    opposing Ukraine is simply not credible, and France will have to
    follow the majority view on this."

    HOW UKRAINE MEASURES UP

    The country's GDP was £2,800 per capita in 2003, compared with an EU
    average of £14,900

    Average life expectancy is 68 (78 within the EU)

    Ukraine has one of the world's highest literacy rates: over 99.5 per
    cent of the population over 15 rated as literate

    Source: World Bank - World Development Indicators database
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