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Love Hurts

05 February 2010 |

Simon Cottrell It's a shame that the internet is a virtual medium, because there are a lot of people out there that I'd like to express my deep feelings of friendship to, and having spent the last two years here in Serbia, I'd like to do it in a truly Serbian way.


Feith: 'New Beginning' for Mitrovica
05 February 2010 | Lawrence Marzouk

The International Civilian Representative in Kosovo, Pieter Feith, has said the appointment of a team to create a new Serb-majority municipality in the divided city of Mitrovica could herald a 'new beginning'.

Serbia Has 'Illusions' on EU Accession Date
09 February 2010 | Bojana Barlovac

Even though recent polls suggest that almost half the Serbian population believe their country will join the EU in less than five years, a WAZ.EUobserver article claims that Serbia has unrealistic expectations about the speed of its EU integration.

Koricanske stijene: Awareness of Security
09 February 2010 |

A member of the Intelligence-Security Agency of Bosnia and Herzegovina says he spoke to Milorad Skrbic while investigating the murder at Koricanske stijene and "determined that he did not have any operational data about this event".



Albania to File For EU Candidacy on April 28

Tirana, Brussels | 13 April 2009 | By Gjergj Erebara
 
Political rallly in Tirana
Political rallly in Tirana
The Albanian government is expected to apply for European Union candidate status on April 28, sources in Tirana and Brussels have told Balkan Insight.

“The formal request for candidate status is expected to be handled to the [EU] Czech presidency possibly before the end of this month,” sources from European Parliament said last week in Brussels. 

The date also was confirmed to Balkan Insight by a government source in Tirana. 

“The government will hand the request on 28 April,” said a high Albania official on condition of anonymity. 

“[Prime Minister] Sali Berisha wanted to surprise Albanians on that occasion,” he added.  

Croatia, Macedonia and Turkey are already candidate countries, while the rest of Western Balkans are classified as “Potential Candidate Countries.” 

Montenegro has applied for candidate status last December but Podgorica is still waiting for further movement on the matter.

Tirana expressed its desire to apply for the candidate status early this year, however several EU officials advised against such a move asking the government of Premier Sali Berisha to “review several factors before.” 

“The parliamentary elections, at the end of June, will be a critical test for Albania's democratic maturity and the appraisal of whether these elections will have been free and fair according to international standards and commitments that will have an impact on whether the European Union considers that Albania is ready for further steps towards European integration,” said Helmuth Lohan, Head of the European Commission Delegation to Albania, in an interview with local broadcaster Vizion Plus. 

“But at the end, of course it is up to Albanian Government to decide on the most appropriate time for submitting its application for EU membership and the Albanian government has said on many occasions that it would do that in consultation with EU member states and the European Commission”, he added. 

Formally every country, even Ukraine can apply for the candidate status, but EU officials argue that Albania should test the political environment within the EU before applying.

According to EU experts this is not the appropriate time for Albania's candidate status bid to be sent to Brussels. 

In June, Europeans will vote for a new European Parliament. In September, Germans will also vote for a new government and the current chancellor Angela Merkel declared few weeks ago that “Europe must consolidate before further enlargement.” 

But despite such problems, diplomatic sources in Tirana said that the government has good reasons to believe that the Czech Presidency will handle the matter in an amicable way.

In the mean time, the opposition in Albania is accusing the government for using the application to earn support for the forthcoming elections. 

“Several EU officials made it clear: Albania should work on elections before applying, but the government does not want to hear this”, said Socialist member of parliament and former minister of foreign affairs Arta Dade.

FACTBOX: Procedures 
Albania’s application for the candidate status will be handled by the European Council.  The European Council has to ask the EU Commission to issue its opinion on the membership application, which means that the Council accepts the application and therefore asks the Commission to do the job. This is a large process, as an average over the last 10-15 years it has taken some nine to ten months, according to European commission officials. But in the case of Montenegro, four months has already gone by and the European Council has not yet asked to the commission to prepare its opinion. 




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Comments:
Dr. Berisha wants another term
2009-04-13 21:20:11
I like the idea of Albanian membership in the EU (who doesn't!?) but Dr. Berisha need to respect the EU "recommendations". We know you are behind in the polls Dr. Berisha, but do you really wanna sacrifice the Albanian bid to the EU because of your political career? Oh wait, of course you do, you are a politician after all.

it was about time!
2009-04-15 11:32:00
I dont get it, why so late! I mean look at Montenegro, they did not care to ask anyone and meet anyone about it, regardles of what is a good time or not. And if this can be giving Berisha points on the poll, so what? Who cares, Albania is moving forward. And in case there are other plans for us, fromthe EU, we better find and hear them now rather then later!

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