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Bulgarian MEPs Urge EU To Be Proactive In South Caucasus

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  • Bulgarian MEPs Urge EU To Be Proactive In South Caucasus

    BULGARIAN MEPS URGE EU TO BE PROACTIVE IN SOUTH CAUCASUS

    Novinite.com
    May 20 2010
    Bulgaria

    The European Parliament has approved a report of a Bulgarian MEP
    urging the EU craft a strategy for the critically important South
    Caucasus region.

    The report of the Bulgarian Socialist MEP, Evgeni Kirilov, stresses the
    need for the Union to be proactive with respect to the stabilization
    and encouraging the development of Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia,
    the three South Caucasus states.

    "The main goal of the EU in the South Caucasus should be to help
    Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia became stable democratic states
    that can have good neighborly relations with one another, and be
    integrated with the EU policies," Kirilov declared before the vote on
    his report entitled "The Need for a Strategy in the South Caucasus,"
    which was adopted with an overwhelming majority by the EP on Thursday.

    "The South Caucasus is not only a region bordering the EU (i.e.

    Bulgaria and Romania through the Black Sea), but also a region
    of enormous strategic importance with respect to our economic and
    security policies because of its increasingly crucial role as an
    energy, transport and communications corridor connecting the Caspian
    Region and Central Asia with Europe," declared Kirilov.

    He expressed his hope that the most recent initiative of the EU for
    the region, the Eastern Partnership, will contribute substantially
    the integration of the three South Caucasus states with the EU, and
    mentioned that the realization of the Nabucco gas transit pipeline
    project necessitated deeper EU presence in the region.

    "Yet, these ambitious policies of the EU will be hard to realize
    because of the shadow cast by the unresolved conflicts in Georgia and
    Nagorny Karabakh. The conflict in Georgia in 2008 made the EU realize
    that it has to play a more active role in the region. This conclusion
    is even more valid for the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh between
    Armenia and Azerbaijan where EU's absence is felt very strongly,"
    the Bulgarian Socialist MEP underscored.

    Kirilov stressed the issues of the hundreds of thousands of displaced
    persons in the region which burdened the development of the three
    states there, and were a serious humanitarian problem.

    "The EU has the means and the expertise to contribute to the creation
    of a tolerant atmosphere in the Southern Caucasus," he said.

    The report of the Socialist MEP was supported strongly by his Bulgarian
    colleague from the European People's Party, Andrey Kovachev, who is
    the Chair of the Bulgarian delegation within the EPP-EP group.

    "I welcome wholeheartedly the report of Mr. Kirilov which stresses the
    need for a more active EU role in the South Caucasus, a region whose
    positive development is in the interest not only for the neighboring
    Black Sea region - for which, unfortunately, the EU does not have a
    clear strategy as well - but also for the entire EU," Kovachev stated
    during the EP debates.

    He expressed his concern over the delay of the ratification of the
    protocols singed last October between Turkey and Armenia, and urged
    the EU to use its experience from the Balkans and Georgia in order
    to help settle the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    "The Lisbon Treaty has provided the EU with a framework for becoming
    a truly global actor. An example in that direction would be the
    participation of the EU as a member in the OSCE Minsk Group, while at
    present only the individual member states participate in the group,"
    Kovachev said referring to the Minsk Group set by the Organization
    for Security and Cooperation in Europe set up in 1992 in order to
    help for the settling of the Nagorno-Karabakh problem.
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