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EU Tones Down Commitment To Eastern Europe

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  • EU Tones Down Commitment To Eastern Europe

    EU TONES DOWN COMMITMENT TO EASTERN EUROPE
    By Bruno Waterfield in Strasbourg

    Daily Telegraph
    07 May 2009
    UK

    The European Union has watered down a pact with Eastern European
    countries including Georgia and Ukraine because of fears of a domestic
    backlash against migration.

    Internal divisions within Europe worked to Russia's advantage ahead
    of the EU "Eastern Partnership" summit with Ukraine, Belarus, Moldova,
    Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia.

    Political fears in key European governments, led by Berlin, has
    undermined the initiative to forge a new pact with former Soviet
    states and to counter a newly assertive Russia.

    The term "European countries", to refer to the six former Soviet
    countries, was dropped from draft texts to avoid any hint that it
    would imply future EU membership and migration rights, an issue which
    is controversial in many European countries.

    Instead the six are described as "Eastern European Partners" and
    "partner countries", a development that will deeply disappoint Ukraine
    and strengthen Russia's attempts to build a "sphere of influence"
    in the region.

    EU ambassadors have also watered down commitments to "visa
    liberalisation", allowing people from the region greater work and
    business access to European countries.

    The question, regarded as a vital benefit cementing the region to
    the West, has been delayed to become a "long-term goal", a major
    climb down from an original text that promised progress towards
    "visa-free" travel.

    Ahead of German elections this September, the issue of migrant workers
    is seen as too politically sensitive in Berlin, eroding EU unity and
    allowing Russia exploit divisions.

    Ukraine is becoming the main location of a battle between Russian
    and the EU over the country's future as an Eastern or Western facing
    country.

    A letter written by the Frank-Walter Steinmeier and Radoslaw Sikorski,
    the German and Polish foreign ministers, last week warned of
    "destabilising effects" for the EU of Ukraine's relations with Russia.

    "Negative developments in Ukraine could have wide ranging
    consequences," they wrote.

    Following the Georgian war last year, Ukraine has complained that
    Russia is systematically issuing Russian passports to Ukrainian
    citizens living in Crimea.

    EU visa liberalisation, allowing more Ukrainians, including people
    from the Crimea, to work in Europe is seen as vital for winning
    influence from Russia.

    The Georgia war last August, where Russia used military force to
    recognise breakaway regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, has raised
    the spectre of a similar conflict in Ukraine.

    Almost 60 per cent of Ukraine's Crimean peninsula is ethnically
    Russian and some groups have called for the territory to split from
    Ukraine to a closer alliance with Russia.

    A document recently circulated by German diplomats in the EU warns that
    the Crimea issue could lead to "a serious deterioration of relations"
    between Russia and Ukraine.

    Berlin has suggested "raising the issue of Crimea with Ukraine in
    a more systematic way" with the goal of "strengthening 'European'
    identity in Crimea, fostering ties with Europe and the West".
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