In spite of the economic and financial crisis affecting
Europe, the EU isn't changing course and is continuing to expand. The last enlargement took place in
2007. With
Romania and
Bulgaria, the EU went from 25 to 27
Member States. How many countries will form the EU of tomorrow? EuroparlTV takes a look at the accession processes. Five countries currently have the status of candidate for
EU membership, but only three have officially started negotiations:
Croatia,
Turkey and
Iceland. Croatia will certainly be the first to cross the finishing line and will become the 28th
Member State of the EU. The talks opened with
Zagreb in
2005 are now complete. The last stage for Croatia is ratification of its accession treaty by all the Member States and itself. It could join the EU in
2013. This
Balkans expert thinks Croatia has increased its efforts in the last two years to meet the conditions set by
Brussels. It has decided to let its shipyards go, to stop the subsidies, which will mean many thousands of unemployed people. It has also started to fight corruption very vehemently. It has indicted its former prime minister and a series of other senior officials. The accession process has really led to a transformation in Croatia. Turkey doesn't seem to be taking the same route as Croatia. Accession negotiations with
Ankara are completely stuck. Some issues on the internal market are problematic and the biggest stumbling block is
Cyprus. Turkey has militarily occupied the north
of the island since 1974. It refuses to recognise the
Greek part of the island.
Relations between
Turkey and the EU for membership have become totally politicised, partly because some Member States don't support
Turkish EU membership, principally
France and
Germany, but also the issues related to the
Cyprus problem. As long as the Cyprus problem isn't resolved, Turkey cannot accede to
the EU anyway. The Turkish
Ambassador to the EU deplores this situation. There's no question of Turkey giving up on accession, which we consider to be in our interest just as it's in the interest of the EU. Turkey is unique. No candidate country which has negotiated its accession during the years that have passed since the EU was created has met the kind of difficulties that we have met. That leaves Iceland, the last country to start official negotiations to join the EU.
Reykjavik has the advantage that much of its legislation is aligned with that of the EU, but negotiations may hit problems over central questions like that of fishing. Products from the sea represent over 60% of the country's exports and the possible application of quotas from Brussels is of concern. Now we're moving into the challenging phase of negotiating the issues that are outside of the
EEA agreement. These are challenging areas: fisheries, agriculture, the monetary union. They have to be negotiated and we have to find an agreement that is mutually acceptable to us and to the
European Union. But the main threat to Iceland's plans to join the EU could come from
Icelanders themselves.
At the end of the negotiations Icelanders will vote in a referendum on whether the country can join the EU. The last opinion poll shows that 57.3% of the island's inhabitants are against the idea. The
Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and
Montenegro have candidate status but have not yet started their
EU accession negotiations.
EuroparlTV video ID: b5e3e795-1bf6-4546-9703-9f8800dd8943
- published: 30 Oct 2012
- views: 1502