Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Crisis-ridden EU marks 60th anniversar­y as turning point

- Associated Press letters@hindustant­imes.com

European Union leaders marked the 60th anniversar­y of their founding treaty on Saturday as a turning point in their history in the knowledge that Britain will officially trigger divorce proceeding­s from the bloc next week.

In their solemn declaratio­n ending the summit, the 27 leaders sought to end paralysis that has gripped the bloc on several issues and enshrined the notion that some member states will be able to move ahead on some issues while others remain on the sidelines.

Desperatel­y trying to portray that sustained unity is the only way ahead in a globalised world, the no-show of British Prime Minister Theresa May was a symbol of the cathartic crisis the 27 other EU nations are going through.

European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker called Brexit “a tragedy.” EU Council President Donald Tusk said that sustained unity for was the only way for the EU to survive.

“Europe as a political entity will either be united, or will not be at all,” he told EU leaders at a solemn session in precisely the same ornate hall on the ancient Capitoline Hill where the Treaty of Rome founding the EU was signed on March 25, 1957.

“Only a united Europe can be a sovereign Europe in relation to the rest of the world,” Tusk said. “Only a sovereign Europe guarantees independen­ce for its nations, guarantees freedom for its citizens. “

To move ahead though, the leaders recognized that full unity on all things will be unworkable.

“We will act together, at different paces and intensity where necessary, while moving in the same direction,” said the declaratio­n signed by the 27 nations.

 ?? AP ?? European Union heads of state in the Cortile di Michelange­lo during the EU summit in Rome on Saturday.
AP European Union heads of state in the Cortile di Michelange­lo during the EU summit in Rome on Saturday.

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