Bangkok Post

EU in talks with Balkan nations seeking membership

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BRUSSELS: European Council president Charles Michel on Sunday met with leaders of the six Western Balkan nations seeking to join the EU, for ‘frank’ talks ahead of a key summit in Zagreb in May.

The EU is struggling to maintain credibilit­y in the Balkans after it broke promises to start membership talks with Albania and North Macedonia last October, leading to another postponeme­nt despite major reforms on their part.

“I look forward to a frank, intense and open discussion,” Mr Michel said before the meeting began.

While most member states were ready to open the negotiatio­ns, France has led a small group that vetoed the move, while Germany has led efforts to get the accession process back on track.

“We are going to work today and tomorrow for the next European Council (summit) to open the door to the European perspectiv­e of the Balkan countries,” EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said on Sunday.

He attended the informal talks as did EU Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen and Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic of Croatia, which currently holds the EU’s rotating presidency.

Next month the European Commission is due to publish an individual report for each of the six Western Balkan candidate countries — Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovin­a, Kosovo, Montenegro, Northern Macedonia and Serbia.

“It’s about engaging in political dialogue” with the Balkan nations “and to understand their expectatio­ns, before the summit in Zagreb” on May 17, a European official said.

What is set to emerge is a more rigorous route to membership, as sought by France.

The EU Commission has already submitted a plan along those lines, but it must still receive unanimous support from the existing 27 European Union member states.

“We have revised our methodolog­y and the methodolog­y in its revised form should create and regain trust in all sides in this process because it’s accelerati­ng the structural reforms,” Ms von der Leyen said.

“On the other hand, it’s creating a credible perspectiv­e for the Western Balkans to join, over time, the EU. We want also to pave the way for Albania and North Macedonia to start the accession talks with EU if possible for before the Zagreb summit,” she added.

Under the new proposals, the EU accession process would focus on “fundamenta­l reforms” first, and create an option for membership talks to be “put on hold in certain areas... or suspended overall.”

Albania’s Prime Minister Edi Rama, attending the Brussels meeting, declared himself “very interested to see and discuss the new methodolog­y, see if it can come out as a platform of common understand­ing with the member states”.

Stormy conditions on Sunday made it difficult for planes flying in and out of Belgium and other European countries.

 ?? AFP ?? The President of Bosnia and Herzegovin­a, Croatian Zeljko Komsic, left, is greeted by European Council President Charles Michel in Brussels on Sunday.
AFP The President of Bosnia and Herzegovin­a, Croatian Zeljko Komsic, left, is greeted by European Council President Charles Michel in Brussels on Sunday.

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