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Georgia And Azerbaijan Failed To Push In A Clause In The Final Decla

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  • Georgia And Azerbaijan Failed To Push In A Clause In The Final Decla

    GEORGIA AND AZERBAIJAN FAILED TO PUSH IN A CLAUSE IN THE FINAL DECLARATION OF 'EASTERN PARTNERSHIP' THAT THE 33 COUNTRIES SHOULD RESPECT EACH OTHER'S 'TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY'

    ArmInfo
    2009-05-08 12:28:00

    ArmInfo. EU "Eastern Partnership" summit was held in Prague on May
    7, during which an official was given to the programme envisaging
    establishment of closer cooperation with Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus,
    Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine. "The Eastern Partnership should not
    reinstate blocks or the fight for spheres of influence", Czech Prime
    Minister Mirek Topolanek said immediately before the start of the
    summit. "It should not be a formal, but a pragmatic cooperation
    of equal partners in the field of trade and energy security, and
    also in the field of strengthening democratic principles and better
    governance", he continued.

    As Euobserver reports, last minute tweaks to the Eastern Partnership
    summit declaration reveal EU unease over enlargement and immigration,
    as well as the complexities of old conflicts on the union's eastern
    frontier.

    An earlier Czech EU presidency text of 29 April referred to the 27 EU
    states plus Ukraine, Belarus, Moldova, Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia
    as "European countries." It also spoke of "visa-liberalisation". The
    latest document, rubber-stamped by EU diplomats in Brussels on
    Wednesday (6 May), renamed the six as "Eastern European Partners"
    and "partner countries." It added that the visa move is a "long-term
    goal". Germany and the Netherlands forced the changes, concerned that
    "European countries" sounds too pro- enlargement.

    The new language on visas is a far cry from pre-April Czech proposals,
    which spoke of "visa-free" travel. The visa wording may see just
    a privileged few, such as diplomats or businessmen, one day freely
    enter the EU, while ordinary people struggle to, say, meet a friend
    in Madrid or try to build a better life in London.

    Meanwhile, Georgia and Azerbaijan failed to push in a clause that the
    33 countries should respect each other's "territorial integrity". The
    latest wording speaks of obeying the "principles and norms of
    international law".

    To note, the leaders of a number of European countries, in particular,
    the British prime minister, French president, as well as heads of
    the governments of Italy, Spain and Austria were not present at
    Prague summit.

    Armenia was represented at the summit by President Serzh Sargsyan.
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