Better in than out?

Apr 13th 2005 
>From The Economist Global Agenda


The European Parliament has voted in favour of Romania and Bulgaria joining
the European Union in 2007 or 2008. The former Yugoslav countries to their
west, Slovenia apart, are lagging far behind. But Serbia has been told that
it too can start accession talks. The most contentious issue will be Kosovo
 


Get article background

LESS than a year after taking in a gaggle of new members, the European Union
(EU) has declared itself ready to absorb a couple more. On Wednesday April
13th, the Union's parliament in Strasbourg voted by large majorities to
allow both Bulgaria and Romania into the club, probably in 2007. The vote
removes the final obstacle to the two Balkan countries signing accession
treaties on April 25th and opens the way for a second wave of EU expansion
into the former eastern block. Eight ex-communist countries (along with
Cyprus and Malta) joined the EU in May last year.

Bulgaria and Romania are scheduled to join the Union on January 1st 2007,
bringing the number of members to 27 and adding 30m to its population. But
the date may be moved back by a year if they are slow to implement reforms
demanded by the EU, thanks to "safeguard clauses" in their accession
treaties. Both countries have to step up the fight against corruption and
organised crime; reform their penal codes, environmental rules and
competition policies; beef up border controls; and, in Romania's case, offer
more protection to minorities.

The eastern Balkan duo are now certain to gain entry to the EU well before
the former Yugoslav countries immediately to their west (apart from
Slovenia, which was one of last May's joiners). But even in that
battle-scarred region the news is encouraging. Almost 15 years after
Yugoslavia began its descent into hell, there is a new determination, on the
ground and in Brussels, to ensure that the countries of the western Balkans
are heading for membership of the EU, rather than drifting further into
isolation and poverty.

Confirmation of this came on Tuesday, when Serbia's and Montenegro's loose
federation was deemed worthy, by an EU feasibility study, of starting
accession talks. The study recognises that big reforms are under way in
Serbia. But it also rewards the country for its co-operation with the
war-crimes tribunal in The Hague. The government of Vojislav Kostunica,
which came to power in March 2004, scoffed at the tribunal, which it saw as
a kangaroo court for Serbs. Two years on, and it has been bundling indictees
to The Hague as fast it can: over the past few months, 13 Serbs and Bosnian
Serbs have been sent for trial.

Yet even with such a favourable feasibility study, Serbian leaders have no
illusions. On March 17th Croatia, years ahead of Serbia in terms of EU
membership, ran into the buffers: Brussels postponed entry talks because of
the Croatian government's failure to arrest General Ante Gotovina. It has
been made clear to Serbia as well that all indictees must leave for
trial-including Ratko Mladic, the Bosnian Serb wartime general.

For Serbia, war criminals may be the easy bit. More contentious is Kosovo.
Technically, the UN-run province remains part of Serbia. But more than 90%
of Kosovo's 2m people are ethnic Albanians, who will settle for nothing
short of independence. For six years Kosovo has lingered under UN control,
as western policymakers hoped the problem would go away. But since March
2004, when ethnic Albanians rioted across the province, it has been clear
that it will not.

In the next few months two reports on how Kosovo is doing will be presented
to the UN Security Council. If they paint a generally positive picture, Kofi
Annan, the UN secretary-general, will appoint a "status envoy", who will
shuttle between Belgrade and Pristina, the Serbian and Kosovan capitals, to
talk over what is now being dubbed Kosovo's "future", not its "final
status". One possible candidate for the job is Giuliano Amato, a former
Italian prime minister who chaired an international commission on the
Balkans that this week released a report on the region's future. The report
advocates Kosovo's independence, to be achieved in four stages.

 

Policymakers who deal with the Balkans believe that eventually Europe's
politicians will realise that it is better to absorb and rehabilitate these
countries than to leave them behind as destitute troublemakers

 
On Kosovo, at least, there are no longer any differences between Europe and
America. Moreover, if prodded, Serbia and Kosovo's Albanians could probably
agree on large parts of a future constitution for Kosovo. The problem, says
a Kosovar politician and analyst, Veton Surroi, will be what to write in the
first article, which lays down whether Kosovo can be defined as an
independent state or as part of Serbia. Since neither side will agree,
American and EU diplomats are now mulling the idea of imposing a final
status for Kosovo, without the full agreement of the parties. Such an
imposed settlement might include several elements, such as that independence
would be conditional for years to come, that NATO would stay to guarantee
security, and that Serbian areas of Kosovo would be given a large degree of
autonomy.

Bajram Kosumi, Kosovo's new prime minister, says he objects to any
conditions placed on Kosovo's independence, as well as to the status envoy
discussing anything about Kosovo's final status with Belgrade. However, if
these are the price to pay for Kosovo's independence he is unlikely to
scupper the deal. Serbia's leaders say they will accept "more than autonomy
but less than independence". They also say that the imposition of
independence would mean radical nationalists taking over in Belgrade and
instability for decades to come. Yet this need not happen if the deal is so
artfully crafted that it includes some compensation for Serbia: for
instance, a fast track towards EU membership, meaning entry by 2014 or
thereabouts, perhaps with Bosnia and Albania in tow.

EU ministers are suffering from enlargement fatigue and the possible failure
of the Union's new constitution. They do not want to deal with the former
Yugoslavia. But policymakers who deal with the region believe that
eventually the politicians will realise that it is better to absorb and
rehabilitate these countries than to leave them behind as destitute
troublemakers.


http://www.economist.com/agenda/PrinterFriendly.cfm?Story_ID=3860203
 
 
Copyright C 2005 The Economist Newspaper and The Economist Group. All rights
reserved.
 









                                   Serbian News Network - SNN

                                        [email protected]

                                    http://www.antic.org/

Reply via email to