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EU Lacks Knowledge about South Caucasus, Peter Semneby Says

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  • EU Lacks Knowledge about South Caucasus, Peter Semneby Says

    PanARMENIAN.Net

    EU Lacks Knowledge about South Caucasus, Peter Semneby
    Says

    26.05.2006 18:38 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ `Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia are
    all members of the EU's European Neighborhood Policy,
    a development that Semneby said was deepening their
    relationship with Brussels and would also entitle them
    to increased aid. `We're talking about hundreds of
    millions of euros for each country. The EU will also
    step up its representation in the countries, which
    will mean there will be a larger degree of visibility
    in the South Caucasus,' European Union's new special
    representative for the South Caucasus Peter Semneby
    stated in an interview with Thomas de Waal, the
    Caucasus Project Coordinator and Editor at the
    Institute for War and Peace Reporting.

    `I will also spend some time trying to explain to the
    public in the South Caucasus what the EU is about.
    There is not a whole lot of knowledge to begin with.
    To the extent that the EU is known, there are still a
    lot of misunderstandings about what [it] is about.'

    `I think there is also lack of knowledge in the EU
    about the south Caucasus and its particular problems
    and about the importance of this region for the EU,
    and if possible this is something I would like to
    engage on.'

    Asked about the hopes of many people in the region who
    dream of joining the EU one day, the special
    representative was careful to reiterate that the
    European Neighborhood Policy `does not contain a
    membership perspective'.

    `It does mean that the countries can achieve a lot of
    the benefits of EU membership by working on the
    implementation of the European Neighborhood Policy,'
    he went on.

    `There is a problem - and I am the first to admit that
    - that since the membership perspective is not there
    as a big carrot at the end, this deprives us of one of
    the most powerful levers we had in encouraging the
    countries of Central Europe to carry out painful reforms.'
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