Kuwait Times

Merkel: EU in ‘critical situation’ after Brexit

Leaders seek to thrash out reform ‘roadmap’

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BRATISLAVA:

German Chancellor Angela Merkel warned yesterday that the EU faces a “critical situation”, as European leaders sought to plot the bloc’s postBrexit future at a summit without Britain. The 27 leaders - minus British Prime Minister Theresa May - gathered at Bratislava’s towering castle overlookin­g the River Danube, determined to respond to the challenges of mass migration, security, globalizat­ion and a stuttering economy. The aim was to thrash out a “roadmap” of reforms during talks in the Slovak capital’s hilltop castle, and a boat trip down the Danube. Merkel said the bloc simply had to improve but her influence as leader of the EU’s biggest economy has been undermined by her unpopular decision to open Germany’s doors last year to nearly a million refugees. “We are in a critical situation. We have to show with our actions that we can get better,” Merkel said as she arrived at the special summit. French President Francois Hollande, the other half of the EU’s “power couple” with Merkel, was equally blunt. “We face either break-up, weakening - or we choose the opposite, together giving Europe a purpose,” said Hollande, who has made common cause with Berlin on boosting EU defense cooperatio­n.

‘Brutally Honest’

EU President Donald Tusk had warned on the eve of the summit that leaders must “have a sober and brutally honest assessment of the situation”. The leaders want to launch a “Bratislava Process” of reforms at this summit, to be further discussed in Malta early next year and then agreed in Rome in March 2017 to mark the 60th anniversar­y of the founding of the EU. An EU official said the initial discussion­s had been “honest, without recriminat­ions” while Tusk had submitted his “roadmap” in the afternoon session.

European Commission head JeanClaude Juncker had meanwhile submitted his version on Thursday but there were no major difference­s and it “mirrored” what was being discussed, the official said. Greeted by soldiers in bright blue uniforms and ceremonial plumes, the leaders held a first round of talks in the castle then lunched on a river cruise on a German-flagged boat down the Danube to informally discuss Brexit.

The 27 leaders have insisted there will be no formal Brexit talks until Britain triggers the two-year divorce process and says what it wants. Maltese Premier Joseph Muscat quipped in a tweet: “Bratislava summit was so far a straightfo­rward discussion of options for EU to move ahead. We are all on the same boat, literally.” Boosting defence cooperatio­n is a key issue for the leaders who hope it will give them something to rally around after deadly terror attacks in France and Belgium. Juncker earlier this week proposed an EU defense headquarte­rs and a common defense force, both ideas that Britain had previously nixed because they might overlap with NATO.

Cracks Everywhere

But cracks in the union are evident everywhere. The migration crisis is the most divisive issue, with many Eastern European leaders blaming Merkel for opening the continent’s doors to refugees from conflict in Syria and elsewhere. Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico, who is hosting the summit, said all wanted unity but a “very honest” exchange of views was needed to make that possible. — AFP

 ??  ?? BRATISLAVA: Slovakian Prime Minister Robert Fico (left), German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban (right) alight after taking a boat down the Danube River during an EU summit yesterday. — AP
BRATISLAVA: Slovakian Prime Minister Robert Fico (left), German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban (right) alight after taking a boat down the Danube River during an EU summit yesterday. — AP

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