The Star Malaysia

European Union summit in Rome

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Leaders look for unity as bloc celebrates 60th anniversar­y without Britain.

roME: European Union leaders celebrated the 60th anniversar­y of the bloc’s founding treaties at a special summit in Rome in a symbolic show of unity despite Britain’s looming departure.

Meeting without Britain, the other 27 member countries will endorse a declaratio­n of intent for the next decade, on the Capitoline Hill where six founding states signed the Treaty of Rome on March 25, 1957.

EU president Donald Tusk and the prime ministers of Italy and Malta greeted the leaders as they arrived at the Renaissanc­e-era Palazzo dei Conservato­ri next to the Forum, for a ceremony long on pomp and short on real politics.

“There will be a 100th birthday of the European Union,” European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker said in an interview with German television ahead of the summit.

The leaders had the words of Pope Francis ringing in their ears, after he warned on the eve of the summit that the crisis-ridden bloc “risks dying” without a new vision.

The Argentine pontiff urged the leaders at a personal audience in the Vatican City on Friday to show solidarity as an “antidote” to populist parties whose popularity has surged in Europe.

The White House congratula­ted the EU overnight on its 60th birthday, in a notable shift in tone for President Donald Trump’s administra­tion, whose deep scepticism about the bloc has alarmed Brussels.

“Our two continents share the same values and, above all, the same commitment to promote peace and prosperity through freedom, democracy, and the rule of law,” the White House said.

The 27 are set to hear a series of speeches urging unity and leadership from Tusk, Juncker, Italian PM Paolo Gentiloni and Maltese premier Joseph Muscat, whose country holds the EU’s rotating presidency.

But British Prime Minister Theresa May’s absence, four days before she launches the two-year Brexit process, and a row over the wording of the Rome declaratio­n underscore the challenges the EU faces.

Security is tight with snipers on rooftops, drones in the skies and 3,000 police officers on the streets following an attack this week in London claimed by the Islamic State (IS) group.

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 ??  ?? Art of politics: EU leaders standing inside the Orazi and Curiazi Hall at Capitoline Hill in Rome. — Reuters
Art of politics: EU leaders standing inside the Orazi and Curiazi Hall at Capitoline Hill in Rome. — Reuters

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