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New Wave Of MEPs More Wary Of Russia, EU Parliament Chief Says

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  • New Wave Of MEPs More Wary Of Russia, EU Parliament Chief Says

    NEW WAVE OF MEPS MORE WARY OF RUSSIA, EU PARLIAMENT CHIEF SAYS

    EUobserver.com
    14:45 CET 28.09.2009

    EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS - Members of the European Parliament from central
    and eastern Europe have brought a different perspective on Russia
    and energy security to Brussels, the president of the EU legislature,
    Jerzy Buzek, said in an interview with this website.

    "We are very much interested and sometimes worried about the EU's
    relations with Russia," he said. "It's a very sensitive issue to some
    countries, especially the Baltic states, which were inside the Soviet
    Union. We need Russia, of course, but I think Russia needs us as well
    and we should base our co-operation on shared rules and values."

    Jerzy Buzek is a former Polish prime minister and activist in the
    Solidarity movement, credited with helping end Russian rule in the
    "new" EU states (Photo: European Parliament)

    Mr Buzek, a former Polish prime minister and activist in the
    anti-Communist Solidarity movement, is the first European Parliament
    head to come from one of the Iron Curtain states which joined the EU
    in 2004.

    He said that questions of democracy and human rights "should never
    be omitted when talking to Moscow," as well as other major powers
    such as China.

    On the subject of "energy security" - a phrase which has gained
    prominence in Europe after several disruptions to Russian gas imports
    - Mr Buzek warned that bilateral deal-making with Russian suppliers
    hurts EU interests.

    He voiced "strong belief" in Nabucco, an EU-backed pipeline project
    designed to reduce energy dependency on Russia, while saying that
    South Stream, a rival Russian scheme backed by Italy and France, is
    "weakening our EU project."

    "We take decisions based on our own interest, but very often that is
    not in the interest of the whole EU. It would be better if we could
    take the decision at EU level and negotiate for all member states,
    taking into account the long term perspective, not just a year or two,"
    he said.

    Talks on a new EU-Russia Partne ssia's refusal to adopt the Energy
    Charter Treaty, the parliament president added, referring to an old
    pact to help EU companies invest in Russia's energy sector.

    But the Pole remained optimistic that the EU's nascent energy policy
    will bear fruit in the coming years.

    "Our common market of capital, goods and services took some years to
    build and function properly. We just started with a common energy
    policy and we've already taken some important decisions, such as
    cross-border connections, how to tackle gas and electricity issues
    inside the EU and help each other in case of emergency."

    EU perspective for Moldova and Ukraine

    In comments on another prickly area in EU-Russia relations, Mr Buzek
    made the case for "opening the door" to future EU membership for
    countries such as Moldova and Ukraine on the model of the Balkan
    states.

    "In the Balkans we had a horrible war more than 10 years ago. And
    now every country - Albania, Kosovo, Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina,
    Montenegro, Macedonia, Croatia - all are queuing for EU membership. And
    this means no war," he said.

    The European Parliament's new assembly with MPs from the six countries
    in the EU's recently-launched "Eastern Partnership" policy - Georgia,
    Ukraine, Moldova, Belarus, Armenia and Azerbaijan - will help transform
    the region by fostering civil society, Mr Buzek believes.

    "Civil society is the most important thing. It's the basis
    for democracy, a real market economy, social reforms, culture,
    education. We've been through that, in Poland and other central and
    eastern European states. We have the same task now ahead with the
    Eastern Partnership."

    EU economic solidarity

    Mr Buzek hopes that his mandate, which ends in December 2011, will
    see further softening of the disparities between "old" and "new"
    member states in what will one day be a "common" Europe.

    "I would like to see the re-unification of our continent and a
    deep feeling that all member states, despite different levels of
    development, feel responsible for the whole EU and that we feel
    solidarity eady to help any region in the EU which needs it," he said.

    Europe's so-called cohesion policy - which provides aid for
    infrastructure, sewage systems and energy connections to the bloc's
    poorest regions - has been important to the new member states, whose
    MEPs have "a special sensitivity" to the issue, Mr Buzek explained.

    With discussions on the EU's next seven-year budget likely to be
    more tense than ever due to the economic crisis, he stressed that
    EU cohesion policy remains important not only for the newcomers,
    but also for some regions in Finland, Portugal, Spain or the former
    East Germany.

    Mr Buzek argued that it was "natural" for national governments to
    react in a protectionist way in a crisis, when "people start to be
    slightly selfish."

    "But we must explain that it is actually thanks to the integration
    of member states that the [EU] economy is stronger than it would have
    been without it," the parliament president said.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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