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EU to open Macedonia, Albania accession talks June 2019

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The European Union agreed Tuesday to open negotiations to join the bloc with Albania and the ex-Yugoslav republic of Macedonia starting in June next year, provided certain conditions are met.

"Member states set out the path towards accession negotiations with the former Yugoslav republic of Macedonia and Albania in June 2019," the current Bulgarian presidency of the EU announced on Twitter.

Austrian EU affairs minister Gernot Bluemel said he had asked the European Commission, the bloc's executive arm, to prepare the groundwork for opening accession talks "but of course. certain conditions have to be met."

Austria takes over the six-month rotating EU presidency in July.

The negotiations could begin after the European parliamentary elections next year if the two candidate countries continue to make progress on reforms demanded by the EU, especially concerning the fight against organised crime and corruption in Albania.

The decision to set a date for starting talks was taken by the bloc's European Affairs ministers during a meeting in Luxembourg which saw reservations expressed by France and the Netherlands, according to two European sources.

The agreement to open talks was negotiated by Luxembourg's foreign minister Jean Asselborn, one of the sources said.

"It was a very difficult birth," conceded German minister Michael Roth in a tweet.

A diplomatic source told AFP that the recent agreement between Athens and Skopje to resolve their name dispute, settling on the Republic of North Macedonia for the ex-Yugoslav republic, helped to convince some of the most hesistant EU states to move ahead.

However, the name change must still be approved in a referendum which if rejected by Macedonian voters would mean that "its invitation to join NATO would be cancelled and its negotiations with the EU would be stalled," warned Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras.

The European Union agreed Tuesday to open negotiations to join the bloc with Albania and the ex-Yugoslav republic of Macedonia starting in June next year, provided certain conditions are met.

“Member states set out the path towards accession negotiations with the former Yugoslav republic of Macedonia and Albania in June 2019,” the current Bulgarian presidency of the EU announced on Twitter.

Austrian EU affairs minister Gernot Bluemel said he had asked the European Commission, the bloc’s executive arm, to prepare the groundwork for opening accession talks “but of course. certain conditions have to be met.”

Austria takes over the six-month rotating EU presidency in July.

The negotiations could begin after the European parliamentary elections next year if the two candidate countries continue to make progress on reforms demanded by the EU, especially concerning the fight against organised crime and corruption in Albania.

The decision to set a date for starting talks was taken by the bloc’s European Affairs ministers during a meeting in Luxembourg which saw reservations expressed by France and the Netherlands, according to two European sources.

The agreement to open talks was negotiated by Luxembourg’s foreign minister Jean Asselborn, one of the sources said.

“It was a very difficult birth,” conceded German minister Michael Roth in a tweet.

A diplomatic source told AFP that the recent agreement between Athens and Skopje to resolve their name dispute, settling on the Republic of North Macedonia for the ex-Yugoslav republic, helped to convince some of the most hesistant EU states to move ahead.

However, the name change must still be approved in a referendum which if rejected by Macedonian voters would mean that “its invitation to join NATO would be cancelled and its negotiations with the EU would be stalled,” warned Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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