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  • Enlargement's growing pains

    Enlargement'sgrowing pains

    The Guardian - United Kingdom; Jun 23, 2005

    WORLD BRIEFING SIMON TISDALL


    EU commissioner Olli Rehn is battling hard to convince aspiring
    members that European enlargement is on course despite the
    constitutional debacle and last week's Brussels summit fracas.

    But his convictions fly in the face of uncomfortable political
    facts. For Europe, bigger is no longer necessarily better.

    "Enlargement was a survivor of the summit, though it was a close
    call," Mr Rehn declared this week. Romania and Bulgaria would be
    admitted as planned in 2007 if all entry criteria were met, he
    said. Talks with Turkey should also begin on time in October.

    Mr Rehn said it would be "irresponsible to disrupt a valuable
    process".

    "Sticking to one's word is a basic [EU] value," he said.

    As EU enlargement chief, Mr Rehn has a job to do. But he risks
    glossing over the anti-enlargement verdict implicit in the French and
    Dutch no votes on the constitution.

    According to a minister who attended the Brussels summit,
    "enlargement" has become a dirty word. A vaguer formulation concerning
    future "European perspectives" is now preferred.

    Key governments have concluded that voters were, in part, registering
    disapproval of last year's "big bang" admission of 10 poorer, mostly
    east European countries, the minister said.

    Despite Mr Rehn's best efforts, two new political realities appear
    unavoidable.

    One is that candidate countries - Romania, Bulgaria, Croatia and
    Turkey - will face closer scrutiny.

    Their record on human rights, judicial and penal reform, corruption
    and media freedom "will be looked at with a more powerful magni fying
    glass", said Franco Frattini, the EU's justice and security
    commissioner.

    Turkey faces an even rougher ride. Ankara must also tackle disputes
    concerning Cyprus and Armenia. And Paris confirmed this week that
    Turkey could be blackballed in a one-off French referendum.

    The former commission president Romano Prodi said yesterday that "the
    conditions are no longer there for Turkey's entry in the short or
    medium term".

    All these countries' hopes are also linked to agreement on a long-term
    EU budget.

    The other harsh post-constitution reality is that Serbia-Montenegro,
    Bosnia, Macedonia and Albania can now expect a more protracted
    application process - with no guarantee of success.

    That realisation has set alarm bells ringing across the region, with
    concern focusing on still simmering Kosovo. "Europe cannot be stable
    without the Balkans," warned Vlado Buckovski, Macedonia's prime
    minister.

    The prospect of a neglected Balkan region sliding back into chaos led
    a group of Europe's elder statesmen, including Carl Bildt and
    Germany's former president Richard von Weizsacker to issued a joint
    appeal last week: "Europe can survive the crisis with its
    constitution. "What Europe cannot survive is a new Srebrenica."

    A backlash born of disappointed hopes is a possibility.

    Mihai-Razvan Ungureanu, Romania's foreign minister, said this week
    that he expected the EU to honour its agreement to admit his country,
    although a one-year delay until 2008 was possible.

    But dishing the Balkans could be "disastrous", he said.

    Erhard Busek, special coordinator of south-east Europe's stability
    pact, said he was worried about a lack of leadership on enlargement.

    "The Balkan countries have to learn to depend on themselves, to learn
    self-responsibility," he said. "But they must stay on the EU
    agenda. There's no alternative."
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