25 October 2024

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Von der Leyen tours Western Balkans in latest EU enlargement drive

By David O'Sullivan
Published on 25/10/2024 - 0:14 GMT+2
Updated 0:24
President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen is expected to arrive Thursday evening in Serbia as part of a tour of the Balkans promoting EU enlargement. 
The news comes after Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk met with Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić to discuss Serbia’s EU membership progress, emphasising Serbia’s importance to the EU and potential for economic cooperation. 
Von der Leyen’s expected visit to Serbia comes only a day after visiting Bosnia and Herzegovina and North Macedonia. 
During her time in the Macedonian capital, Skopje, von der Leyen said the country had made “great progress in implementing reforms” necessary to join the EU. 
The European Commission chief said the EU was “committed to its enlargement plans, and it will be the Union’s top priority.” 
North Macedonia applied for EU membership in March 2004 and was granted candidate status in 2005. However, its EU path has stalled due to vetos from neighbouring Greece and Bulgaria.
Von der Leyen also visited the central Bosnian village of Donja Jablanica on Thursday after it was devastated by recent floods and landslides. 
European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen during her visit to the area that was recently hit by floods and landslides, in Jablanica, Bosnia, Thursday, Oct. 24, 2024
European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen during her visit to the area that was recently hit by floods and landslides, in Jablanica, Bosnia, Thursday, Oct. 24, 2024Armin Durgut/Copyright 2024 The AP. All rights reserved.
The natural disaster claimed 27 lives, and the village was buried in debris. 
Bosnia has sought EU aid, and many member states sent teams to help through the EU’s civil protection mechanism. 
“Europe stands with you, and we are here not only for the short run but also for the mid and long term, to help you first of all, of course to help immediately, but second to reconstruct and rebuild after the disaster,” said von der Leyen. 
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Disagreements, conflicts and divisions in the region are being encouraged by Moscow to prevent the integration of the Western Balkan countries into the European Union (EU). With this statement issued in Tirana on Wednesday, the President of the European Commission (EC), Ursula von der Leyen, issued a warning to the candidate countries to be more vigilant and not fall into Russia’s trap when it comes to the European integration process in the region.

Obstacles to the integration of the Balkans into the EU: Von der Leyen points the finger at Russia

". . .Von der Leyen chose Tirana as the first stop of the Balkan trip, attending the opening ceremony of the academic year of the College of Europe campus. In her speech to the students, she said very clearly: “Wherever there is progress towards reconciliation or regional integration, it is these forces that bring old conflicts to light. . .
  • The same messages of overcoming disputes with neighbors through the implementation of agreements are expected to be delivered in Pristina and Belgrade.

The stalemate in the region’s EU integration process has increased Euroscepticism among the citizens of the six candidate countries in the region. . .
  • Therefore, the EC leader’s visit to the capitals of these countries is aimed at restoring the belief that European integration is possible, vibrant and useful for the problematic region. 
After Brussels approved the reform plans of the region’s governments, von der Leyen also focused on the promotion of the EU Plan for Growth and Reform in the Balkans, under which 6 billion euros will be allocated to these countries. . ."

EU capitals fume at ‘Queen VDL'

Diplomats accuse European Commission president of overreach amid a furor over her trip to Israel.


LITHUANIA-NATO-POLITICS-DIPLOMACY
“She has increasingly been behaving like a queen,” said one EU diplomat | Ludovic Marin/AFP 


BRUSSELS — . . .the German politician’s glowing reputation abroad is increasingly belied by a malaise within the central institutions and capitals of the 27-country European Union. 
  • In private conversations in Brussels, diplomats, lawmakers and her own European Commission, staffers complain “VDL” is overstepping her job description, cutting EU governments out of her decision-making and ruling with a small group of advisers by decree.

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