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Five Years Of European Neighborhood Policy: More Trade, More Aid, Mo

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  • Five Years Of European Neighborhood Policy: More Trade, More Aid, Mo

    FIVE YEARS OF EUROPEAN NEIGHBORHOOD POLICY: MORE TRADE, MORE AID, MORE PEOPLE-TO-PEOPLE CONTACTS

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    May 12, 2010 - 21:11 AMT 16:11 GMT

    For five years, the European Union has been delivering more trade,
    more aid, more people-to-people contacts and far deeper co-operation
    between the EU and its neighbours on the whole range of their economic,
    political and sectoral reforms. Partnership has significantly
    developed in areas like transport, energy, environment and climate
    change, research, health and education. This has been backed up with
    an increase in the current Financial Framework by 32% and will reach
    over EUR 2 billion annually in 2013, Delegation of the European Union
    to Armenia reported.

    "The European Neighbourhood Policy is a success story with many
    examples of concrete achievements on the ground," commented Catherine
    Ashton, Vice-President of the Commission and High Representative of
    the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy. "But there is a lot
    more we can and should do to make our part of the world more secure,
    more stable and more prosperous. In a globalized world, as European
    and Mediterranean countries, we need to help each other face the
    economic crisis. We need to work together to confront the new threats
    and challenges of our time, such as international terrorism, human
    trafficking and cross-border organised crime. We need to co-operate to
    solve the disputes and conflicts that still hold parts of our region
    back, and deny many ordinary people the benefits of globalisation. We
    want our neighbours to join our efforts to bring peace and security
    to other parts of the world who are less fortunate than we are. And
    as a Union built on shared values, we want our neighbours to benefit
    from the stability and prosperity that come with open and democratic
    society and the rule of law. This ambitious agenda is a key priority
    for me as we press ahead with the implementation of the Lisbon Treaty
    and the establishment of the External Action Service. Our friends
    in our European and Mediterranean neighbourhood will be among the
    first to benefit from a more active, more coherent and more effective
    European foreign policy."

    Stefan Fule, Commissioner for Enlargement and European Neighbourhood
    Policy, added: "Further strengthening the ENP is no less than an
    investment in the EU's own stability and prosperity - and this must
    be reflected in our offer to our partners. The ENP is a win-win game:
    the higher our partners' reform ambitions, the stronger our response.

    Economic reforms have progressed remarkably across our neighbourhood,
    both East and South. What is essential for the future is to go up
    a gear on democratic and political reforms, where progress has been
    real but generally slower."
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