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  • Commission: No New Enlargement Wave Seen

    Newsday, NY
    June 21 2005

    Commission: No New Enlargement Wave Seen

    By JAN SLIVA



    BRUSSELS, Belgium -- The European Commission warned Tuesday it would
    postpone EU membership for Bulgaria and Romania if they failed to
    introduce essential reforms, and said the European Union must 'pace
    itself' after 10 new members joined last year.

    "My message to (Romania and Bulgaria) is to fulfill the conditions of
    accession to the letter," said Olli Rehn, the EU commissioner
    overseeing the expansion plans. "I hope that they will make it in
    time, but I would not hesitate to recommend a postponement of their
    membership."

    Romania and Bulgaria are scheduled to join Jan. 1, 2007, while
    Croatia's membership has been postponed because a fugitive former
    general wanted by the war crimes tribunal remains at large.

    The next wave of enlargement "isn't just round the corner," Rehn
    said.

    "We need to pace ourselves after last year's big bang when the 10 new
    states joined the union," he told the European Parliament's foreign
    affairs committee.

    Concerns over further EU expansion were believed to be one of the
    reasons why French and Dutch voters rejected the EU constitution.

    Turkey must maintain the momentum of its reforms if it wants to start
    accession negotiations Oct. 3 and Rehn urged it to resolve a dispute
    over the massacre of Armenians during World War I. Armenians say that
    Ottoman Turks slaughtered 1.5 million Armenians in a planned genocide
    and have demanded that Turkey recognize the killings as genocide.

    "Turkey has problems tackling the truth, which is always the basis
    for reconciliation," he said.

    Rehn also said it was important to prepare for membership talks with
    other Balkan nations to give them a European perspective, and
    insisted a long-term prospect of EU membership will help bolster
    stability in a region recently wracked by war.

    He spoke after Bosnia's prime minister urged EU leaders not to stop
    the enlargement process because of the current EU crisis triggered by
    the disagreements over the bloc's constitution and future funding.

    "We expect European leadership to avoid having second thoughts about
    future enlargements, after the double 'no' to the European
    constitution," Prime Minister Adnan Terzic told the Council of
    Europe's parliamentary assembly in Strasbourg, France.

    Albania, Macedonia and Serbia-Montenegro are also seeking to join the
    EU but are yet to start negotiating membership with the bloc.
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