EU set to invite 10 countries to join - but no date set for Turkey
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Your support makes all the difference.The European Commission will give 10 countries the green light next week for EU entry in 2004 and suggest that two more could join in 2007 – but leave Turkey without a date for talks on its membership bid.
In private briefings before next Wednesday's report, it was revealed that all 10 – Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Slovenia, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta and Cyprus – had satisfied Brussels that they had done enough to merit entry. They expect to be invited to join the EU at December's heads of government summit in Copenhagen.
More surprising is the suggestion that Romania and Bulgaria, which will not join the EU in the first wave, could be ready as soon as 2007.
However the European Commission will not recommend a starting date for negotiations with Turkey, whose candidature has been hampered by worries over its human rights record. Few expected such a pledge to Ankara at this point, although heads of government will have to decide in Copenhagen how to pursue the issue.
Next week's report will praise Ankara for introducing a recent flurry of reforms, which include the abolition of the death penalty in peacetime and more cultural rights for its Kurdish minority. This week it announced that the Kurdish separatist leader Abdullah Ocalan would be spared the death penalty.
And Commission officials insisted the document would not prejudge the EU leaders' decision on whether to set a date for negotiations. They played down speculation that Ankara would be offered a €1bn (£620m) annual aid package as a consolation prize for its slow progress towards membership. However Turkish accession is acutely sensitive because of the Cyprus issue and because some EU governments feel Turkey is simply too big to be absorbed.
Next week's report marks the beginning of the final stage of negotiations on EU enlargement. Ahead lie two months of talks on the most delicate issue: its financing.
The Commission will seek the power to impose safeguards to protect the markets of member states in the first two or three years of membership if the new countries do not apply EU legislation properly. Similar safeguards were put in place for a year during the last enlargement, which brought Austria, Sweden and Finland into the bloc in 1995, but they were never invoked.
Thetimetable could still be upset by a "No" vote in Ireland's referendum on the Nice Treaty on 19 October, which will adapt the EU's institutions for enlargement. Anders Fogh Rasmussen, the Prime Minister of Denmark, who holds the EU's presidency, said yesterday that a second rejection of the treaty in the Irish referendum could create a crisis. "A new 'no' would create an unprecedented and unpredictable crisis. And I would like to stress, there is no plan B," he said.
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