Dragi colegi, 

 

Inainte de toate, La Multi Ani, si sa avem parte de un 2007 pe placul tuturor. 

 

Atrageam atentia acum cateva luni pe aceasta lista despre iminenta formarii 
unui grup politic radical de dreapta in Parlamentul European. Fiind necesari 19 
membri pentru formarea unui nou grup politic in PE, pana in acest moment nu s-a 
putut intruni acest minim, impediment rezolvat o data cu accederea la statului 
de europarlamentar a 5 reprezentanti romani (PRM) si al unmui bulgar (Ataka). 

 

Trist ca asta este una dintre primele contributii romanesti in UE. Din 27 de 
state membre, Romania doneaza un sfert din membri acestei grupari. 

 

Amana S. Ferro

 

 

New far-right group for parliament 

 
<http://www.eupolitix.com/EN/Bulletins/PressReview/fullpressreview.htm?bulletindate=08-Jan-2007#New+far-right+group+for+parliament>
 
http://www.eupolitix.com/EN/Bulletins/PressReview/fullpressreview.htm?bulletindate=08-Jan-2007#New+far-right+group+for+parliament
 

A new far-right political group in the European parliament is set to be 
launched at next week’s Strasbourg plenary, bringing together about 20 MEPs 
from at least six countries.

Bruno Gollnisch, a French MEP and deputy leader of Jean-Marie Le Pen’s National 
Front, is set to lead the new group, expected to be named either Europe of the 
Fatherlands or Identity, Sovereignty, Tradition.

Members are expected to include one MEP from Bulgaria’s extreme Ataka party, 
which campaigns against gypsies and Turks, and five from Romania’s anti-Semitic 
Greater Romanian party.

 

Romania's first gift to the European Union - a caucus of neo-fascists and 
Holocaust deniers


· Accession states mean group has enough MEPs
· Le Pen deputy set to be leader of far-right alliance 

Ian Traynor, Europe editor
Monday January 8, 2007
The Guardian <http://www.guardian.co.uk>  - 
http://www.guardian.co.uk/eu/story/0,,1984947,00.html 

In France, the group's prospective leader has been barred from teaching at his 
university and is awaiting a court verdict for questioning the Nazis' mass 
murder of Europe's Jews. His Bulgarian colleague brags that his country has the 
"prettiest Gypsies" and says he knows where to buy 12-year-old Gypsy brides for 
"up to €5,000" (£2,250). Then there is the Polish professor who uses public 
office to pay tribute to General Franco, the late Spanish dictator. Or the 
intellectual strategist of an Austrian party whose ideology, according to a 
Vienna court, is similar to that of Hitler's "national socialism". 

 

Article 
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/eu/story/0,,1984947,00.html#article_continue#article_continue>
  continues

  _____  

 
<http://ads.guardian.co.uk/click.ng/Params.richmedia=yes&spacedesc=mpu&site=Guardian&navsection=1699&section=106710&country=bel&rand=0534008>
 Advertisement

  _____  

Such are the leading lights of "Europe of the Fatherlands", the world of 
politically organised European far-right extremism who are expected to form 
their first transnational organisation next week by establishing a formal 
caucus in the European parliament. 

The development is an early result of the accession of Romania and Bulgaria. 
Ironically, given the hostility of the west European far right to expansion, to 
immigration, and to eastern Europe, it is Romania's entry that has made the 
caucus possible: the EU parliament's rules stipulate that an official caucus in 
the chamber needs to have representatives from at least five countries, and a 
minimum of 19 MEPs. They now meet this requirement. 

Efforts have been under way for years to increase the clout of the far right in 
Europe by pooling assets and resources. The former pioneer of the modern 
European populist right, Jörg Haider of Austria, was wooed as a possible 
European leader. But the plans foundered because of differences among the 
notoriously fractious national leaders. These frictions remain. Italy's 
Northern League, for example, is boycotting the caucus because the league's 
head, Umberto Bossi, cannot stand the leader of France's National Front, 
Jean-Marie Le Pen. 

"It's pretty much watertight, although there are still a few imponderables," 
the far-right Austrian MEP Andreas Moelzer told the Austrian press agency. 
"We've already got a common programme." 

The plan is to announce the creation of an official parliamentary caucus during 
the first session of the year on January 15. The caucus will bring together 
about 20 MEPs from at least six countries. Mr Moelzer said the numbers could 
expand to 40. Ashley Mote, an MEP for south-east England who sits as an 
independent and was previously from the UK Independence party, is being 
mentioned as a member. 

Bulgaria's quota of European parliament seats includes one held by the extreme 
Ataka party of Volen Siderov, which campaigns against Gypsies or Roma and 
Turks, while Romania has supplied a breakthrough for the hard right by gaining 
five seats for Corneliu Vadim Tudor's anti-Hungarian, anti-Semitic and 
anti-Roma Greater Romanian party. 

The turnaround came last week when Mr Tudor said his delegates would join the 
new caucus, expected to be named either "Europe of the Fatherlands" or 
"Identity, Sovereignty, Tradition". 

The brains behind the new movement are Mr Moelzer, who was an ideologist for Mr 
Haider for years before falling out with him, and Frank Vanhecke, the leader of 
Vlaams Belang, Belgium's separatist Flemish nationalist party. Ironically, Mr 
Moelzer's Austrian Freedom party voted against letting Romania join the EU. 

Bruno Gollnisch, a French MEP and a deputy leader of Mr Le Pen's National 
Front, is expected to lead the new group, with Mr Moelzer as its general 
secretary. 

The members include Alessandra Mussolini, granddaughter of the Italian former 
fascist leader Benito, and Dimitar Stoyanov, a new Bulgarian MEP who circulated 
an email saying there were much "prettier Gypsies" in Bulgaria after a 
Hungarian Roma woman was named European MP of the year a few months ago. "You 
can even buy yourself a loving [Gypsy] wife aged 12 or 13 ... The best of are 
very expensive, up to €5,000 each." 

Mr Gollnisch is awaiting a verdict from a Lyon court on charges of questioning 
the Holocaust. Other possible members of the group include the League of Polish 
Families, a junior partner in Warsaw's centre-right government, regularly 
accused of gay-bashing and anti-Semitism. 

By establishing a formal caucus, the extreme right will benefit from greater EU 
funding. A priority, said Mr Moelzer, will be to fight any German-led attempts 
to revive Europe's comatose constitution.

 

 

 

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