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  • EU/S.Caucasus: ties should be enhanced through action plans

    Europe Information Service
    Euro-East
    March 4, 2005

    EU/SOUTH CAUCASUS: TIES SHOULD BE ENHANCED THROUGH ACTION PLANS,
    COMMISSION SAYS

    The European Union should boost its political and economic ties with
    Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia, in return for progress on reforms
    under bilateral action plans. That was what the European Commission
    recommended on March 2, issuing a series of country reports on
    countries covered by European Neighbourhood Policy (ENP) and
    suggestions for what the main elements of prospective action plans
    should be. ENP is the initiative looking to enhance the EU's
    relations with its post-enlargement neighbours to the East and South.


    Reports and reforms.

    The Commission adopted on March 2 so-called country reports on Egypt
    and Lebanon, and the three South Caucasus countries Armenia,
    Azerbaijan and Georgia. These three countries were added to the ENP
    in mid-2004. The country reports give a factual account of the
    political, economic and institutional situation in the countries
    concerned, and of their relations with the EU.

    The reports focus on areas which the Commission says would form the
    basis of any future action plans, namely:

    - Political reform: strengthening democracy, good governance and
    dialogue on human rights;

    - Economic reform: including promoting a good business and investment
    climate;

    - Trade, market and regulatory reforms: promoting trade and helping
    partner countries to integrate into the global trading system,
    encouraging partner countries to apply the standards of the EU's
    internal market;

    - Cooperation in the field of justice, liberty and security: judicial
    reform and migration issues;

    - Infrastructure networks (energy, transport and telecommunications,
    information society) and cooperation on the environment;

    - People-to-people contacts: education, research and development,
    culture, civil society, and the opening of certain Community
    programmes.

    The reports "indicate the need for continued reform in Armenia,
    Azerbaijan and Georgia and for progress in a number of key areas".
    The Commission said that the governments concerned had declared their
    determination to address the various challenges identified, to
    develop relations with the EU and to integrate further into European
    structures. It said it believed that ENP action plans could be used
    to strengthen relations and promote implementation of the necessary
    reforms. The Commission recommended to EU member states that they
    agree that work should begin on the plans.

    Priorities and carrots.

    The Commission also suggested the key objectives for the prospective
    three to five-year action plans. These include, for example, the
    decommissioning of Armenia's Medzamor nuclear power plant and making
    progress in Azerbaijan's WTO accession.

    According to the Commission, the action plans - to be negotiated with
    each country separately - should provide among other things for:
    support for market economy reforms leading to gradual economic
    integration into the EU's internal market; increased financial
    support including an extension of the European Investment Bank's
    mandate to the South Caucasus countries as of 2007; possible dialogue
    on visa cooperation and readmission agreements (on taking back
    illegal immigrants); and possible "new enhanced" agreements with the
    EU to replace the current Partnership and Cooperation Agreements on
    their expiry.

    The Commission also said that it intends to open a delegation office
    in Azerbaijan in 2005. Sources explained that the Commission already
    has a full-scale office in Georgia, and was preparing to open a
    delegation in Baku on the same basis as the smaller-scale operation
    (called a "regionalised" delegation office) in Yerevan, Armenia.

    EU External Relations/Neighbourhood Policy Commissioner Benita
    Ferrero-Waldner said that 2005 would be "the year of delivery" for
    neighbourhood policy, beginning the implementation of action plans
    already adopted and developing new ones: "The challenge for the EU
    and for our partners will be to turn the commitments and aspirations
    contained in such plans into reality, through measurable reforms
    bringing concrete benefits for our neighbouring countries and their
    citizens."

    --

    ENP action plans have already been negotiated with Israel, Jordan,
    Moldova, Morocco, the Palestinian Authority, Tunisia and Ukraine.
    Formal endorsement is still awaited with Morocco, the Palestinian
    Authority and Tunisia, with sources saying that this is expected in
    the coming weeks. EU member states decided in June 2004 to include
    Armenia, Azerbaijan and in Georgia ENP, on the basis of a strategy
    paper issue by the Commission that May. The Commission was invited to
    report on progress made by each country with regard to political and
    economic reforms.

    --

    Next steps.

    EU member states must now formally decide whether work on action
    plans with the South Caucasus countries should begin. The Commission
    said that work would start immediately once this had happened.
    Georgian Foreign Minister Salome Zurabishvili told Europe Information
    New Neighbours that she hoped that EU member states would agree in
    March to launch the action plan. Commission sources said the aim
    would be to try to conclude the new plans this year.
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