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    Home » World politics » Civil society from EU candidate countries soon to participate in EESC works

    Civil society from EU candidate countries soon to participate in EESC works

    The European Economic and Social Committee has issued an invitation (until January 25) to the nine countries on this path to apply to become "Enlargement Candidate Members" and contribute to the consultative work in 2024. President Oliver Röpke: "We are the first EU body to progressively integrate them."

    Federico Baccini</a> <a class="social twitter" href="https://twitter.com/@federicobaccini" target="_blank">@federicobaccini</a> by Federico Baccini @federicobaccini
    5 January 2024
    in World politics

    Brussels – A crucial new year begins for EU enlargement, which,
    after the decisions of the last European Council in December 2023,
    is about to take on somewhat more defined contours thanks to the
    first EU institution that will concretely open its doors to new
    candidates for EU membership. The European Economic and Social
    Committee (EESC) has issued an invitation to civil society in the
    nine countries on this path to apply to become “Enlargement
    Candidate Members”
    and contribute to the Committee’s
    consultative work in 2024.

    Cese Oliver Röpke Roberta Metsola
    The president of the European Economic and Social Committee, Oliver Röpke, and the president of the European Parliament, Roberta Metsola (August 31, 2023)

    “Geopolitics has re-emerged as an existential issue in the political
    agenda; the EU must live up to the task ahead: the time has come for
    its geopolitical awakening” is the exhortation of the president of the
    EESC, Oliver Röpke, outlining the developments of what last year
    was anticipated as the “Honorary Members of Enlargement Initiative”.
    The idea is to include new honorary members from civil society
    for each candidate country in the process of drafting EESC

    opinions: from energy to labor and social rights, from digital and
    green transition to industrial policy, sustainable development and
    the single market. The nine EU candidate countries—Albania,
    Bosnia and Herzegovina, Georgia, North Macedonia, Moldova,
    Montenegro, Serbia, Turkey, and Ukraine—would be involved, while
    Kosovo
    (which applied for membership in December 2022) would
    not be included for now. Speaking to Eunews, President Röpke did
    not rule out “closer cooperation” with Pristina, despite the fact that
    for the initiative “we have decided to stick to the Council’s decisions
    on candidate status.”

    Civil society organizations from the nine candidate countries can
    apply until January 25
    (here is the link). In the selection process,
    the level of participation in national civil and social dialogue and
    international networks, adherence to the EU values enshrined in
    Article 2 of the Treaty on European Union (human dignity, freedom,
    democracy, equality, rule of law, and respect for human rights,
    including minority rights), gender equality, youth representativity
    and knowledge of at least one of the official languages of the Union
    will be considered. After selecting the pool of 21 members for
    Ukraine and Turkey and 15 for the other countries
    , participation
    will be extended to the entire cycle of opinions (study groups, section
    meetings and plenary sessions), with an annual plenary specifically
    on enlargement issues
    . “This innovative initiative makes the ESSC
    the first EU body to progressively integrate representatives of the
    enlargement countries into its activities,” claimed President Röpke,
    explaining the aim of the pilot project for this year (to be reassessed
    in December).

    Where does EU enlargement stand

    Of the six Western Balkan countries on the path to EU enlargement,
    four have already begun accession negotiations (Albania, North
    Macedonia, Montenegro, and Serbia), one has received candidate
    status(Bosnia and Herzegovina-), and the last has formally applied for
    and is awaiting the response of the Twenty-Seven (Kosovo). For 
    Tirana and Skopje
    negotiations began in July last year, after waiting
    8 and 17 years, respectively, while Podgorica and Belgrade have
    been at this stage for 11 and 9 years, respectively. After six years
    since applying for EU membership, also Sarajevo became a
    candidate to join the Union on December 15, 2022, and the last
    European Council in December decided that accession negotiations
    could be opened “once the necessary degree of compliance with the
    membership criteria has been achieved.” Pristina is in the most
    complicated position
    after the formal request was sent at the end of
    last year: since its unilateral declaration of independence from
    Belgrade in 2008, five EU member states—Cyprus, Greece, Romania,
    Spain, and Slovakia—are still not recognising it as a sovereign state.

    The upheaval in EU enlargement began four days after the Russian
    armed aggression when, amid the war, Ukraine applied for
    “immediate” membership in the Union, with the application signed
    on February 28, 2022, by President Zelensky. Demonstrating the
    irreversibility of a process of rapprochement with Brussels as a
    clear reaction to the risk of seeing its independence from
    Moscow
    erased, three days later (March 3), Georgia and Moldova 
    also decided to take the same path. The European Council of
    June 23, 2022, approved the line drawn by the commission in its 
    recommendation: Kiev and Chișinău became the sixth and seventh
    candidates for EU membership, while Tbilisi was recognized as having
    a European perspective in the EU enlargement process. Again following
    the recommendation contained in the EU Enlargement Package,
    the December 14-15, 2023 summit of EU leaders decided to start
    accession negotiations with Ukraine and Moldova
    and grant
    Georgia candidate status
    .

    Negotiations for Turkey‘s accession
    to the European Union, on the other hand, were launched in 2005,
    but have been frozen now since 2018 due to backward steps on
    democracy, rule of law, fundamental rights, and independence of the
    judiciary. In the chapter on Turkey of the latest annual Enlargement
    Package presented in October 2022, it was put into writing that
    it “does not reverse course and continues to move away from the EU
    positions on the rule of law, increasing tensions over respect for borders
    in the Eastern Mediterranean.” At the NATO summit in Vilnius at the
    end of June, the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, tried to
    force his hand, menacing that he would bind Sweden’s membership
    in the Atlantic Alliance to Brussels opening Turkey’s path back to
    the EU. The blackmail failed, but the dossier on Ankara was addressed
    in a specific strategic report to Brussels.

     

    English version by the Translation Service of Withub
    Tags: eesceu enlargementeuropean economic and social committeehonorary members enlargementoliver röpke

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