BRUSSELS,
October 9 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - The European Commission
formally recommended Wednesday, October 9, the entry of 10 countries
into the European Union (E.U.) by 2004, in a historic expansion of the
15-member bloc through central Europe and the Mediterranean.
Thirteen
years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, the E.U.'s executive arm gave
the green light for a reshaping of political Europe that will now also
include a country of long troubled former Yugoslavia.
Barring
last-minute hitches - including an Irish referendum later this month
which in theory could derail the whole project, the new members will
join in time for European parliament elections in 2004.
"The
historical and political arguments in favor of enlargement are
compelling," said a commission report, according to the final draft
seen by Agence France-Presse (AFP).
The
20-member commission approved the report, which gives detailed
assessments of 13 candidate states, ahead of its presentation to the
European parliament, an E.U. source said.
The
report noted that two poorer Balkan countries, Romania and Bulgaria,
hope to join the E.U. in 2007, but failed to give Turkey a start date
for negotiations.
The
10 countries approved for E.U. membership are: Cyprus, the Czech
Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia
and Slovenia.
The
commission's proposals will form the basis for a political decision on
E.U. enlargement expected by the end of the year.
Israel,
which has been lobbying for membership in the bloc, did not feature in
the E.U.'s potential candidate list.
Israel’s
exclusion follows a harsh E.U. criticism of the occupying state for a
massacre Monday, October 7 of 16 Palestinian civilians. A statement from
the E.U. presidency condemned "the arbitrary use of extra judicial
killings, which will not bring security to the Israeli people."
"There
can be no justification for military actions directed indiscriminately
against civilian neighborhoods, whether Palestinian or Israeli,"
read an E.U. statement, concluding:
"Military
and violent actions only serve to fuel hatred and undermine attempts by
the parties and the international community to bring about
reconciliation and hope for a peaceful solution to the conflict."
"I
regret and condemn very much the acts which have been committed by the
Israeli army this morning," said Danish Foreign Minister Per Stig
Moeller, whose country currently holds the rotating E.U. presidency.
The
E.U. presidency statement added that the Israeli assault came "at a
time where there was hope for a resumption of political talks on
implementing the recommendations of the recent Quartet meeting in New
York."
E.U.
leaders will meet in Brussels October 24-25 to discuss the
recommendations, setting the stage for a December 12-13 summit in
Copenhagen at which formal invitations will be extended.
But
obstacles still remain even on the final straight of the E.U. candidate
states' long and winding path towards joining the bloc.
These
include notably the new Irish referendum on October 19 on the 2000 Nice
Treaty, which is crucial for E.U. enlargement to go ahead in 2004.
Ireland
sent shock waves through Europe in June last year when, in a first
referendum, the 2000 Nice treaty on enlargement was rejected by 54
percent of voters.
"There's
no plan B" if Ireland snubs the treaty again, admitted Commission
spokesman Jonathan Faull Wednesday, adding that an Irish no vote would
"create a situation of uncertainty, disarray."
"But
I do not want to predict the unpredictable," he said.
The
E.U. has pressed ahead with enlargement despite a number of nagging
worries over the ability of the new countries to cope with E.U.
standards - notably for lack of funds.
The
cost of enlargement is a massive 40 billion euros (dollars) between 2004
and 2006, according to the commission.
Much
of that cost will be channeled into overcoming major disparities between
the economies of current members and the newcomers. In 2001 the average
gross domestic product per head of population in the candidate countries
was only half that of the current E.U. average.
Of
all the costs of expansion, the financing of agriculture has posed the
biggest problem for the E.U.
The
bloc is already struggling to reform its own farming subsidy system, and
negotiations on the issue are likely to continue down to the wire with a
number of heavily agricultural candidate states.
The
10 candidates given the green light will no doubt welcome the
commission's reports. Turkey is unlikely to be so pleased.
The
Commission praises Ankara's recent reforms, including giving more rights
to ethnic Kurds and abolishing the death penalty. But while pledging to
double E.U. financial aid to Turkey by 2006, it said: "Considerable
further efforts are needed."
Turkish
Foreign Minister Sukru Sina Gurel said last weekend that ties between
his country and the European Union would suffer if E.U. leaders refuse
this year to give a date for the start of talks.
The
commission report cards on individual countries were globally positive,
but included a number of black marks, notably on the issue of
corruption.
The
E.U.'s executive underlined that it would continue to monitor the
candidates' progress up to and beyond the signature of an Accession
Treaty, expected early next year.
Washington,
anxious to persuade a reluctant Turkey to back its war plans for Iraq,
has made it plain it wants Turkey drawn closer into the Western bloc.
"We believe Turkey’s future is in Europe," said one U.S.
diplomat in Brussels, the Scottish newspaper, the Scotsman
reported.