Accession Negotiations of the European Union 1


Accession Negotiations of the European Union 1 : The applications of ten Central and Eastern European countries were given a favourable reception at the Luxembourg European Council (December 1997). The official accession negotiations then proceeded in two phases. In March 1998, negotiations began with six "first-wave" candidate countries (Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Poland and Slovenia). The "second-wave" candidate countries (Bulgaria, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Romania and Slovakia) began negotiations in February 2000, when it was felt that their reforms had made rapid enough progress. Before negotiations opened, an evaluation of each applicant country's legislation was carried out to set up a work programme and define negotiating positions. The accession negotiations examine the applicants' capacity to fulfil the requirements of a Member State and to apply the body of Community laws (the acquis) at the time of their accession, in particular the measures required to extend the single European market, which will have to be implemented immediately. The negotiations also look at the issue of the pre-accession aid that the European Union (EU) may provide in order to help with the incorporation of the acquis. The negotiations can be concluded even if the acquis has not been fully transposed, as transitional arrangements can be applied after accession. The negotiations proper take the form of bilateral Intergovernmental Conferences (EU/applicant country), bringing the ministers together every six months and the ambassadors every month. The common negotiating positions have been defined by the European Commission for each of the chapters relating to matters of Community competence and approved unanimously by the Council. The results of the negotiations are incorporated in a draft accession treaty. This must be approved by the Union and ratified by the Member States and the applicant countries. At the Copenhagen European Council (12- 13 December 2002), the Commission concluded the negotiations with ten applicant countries: the Czech Republic, Cyprus, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia, thus enabling them to join the Union on 1 May 2004. As far as Bulgaria and Romania are concerned, the goal is to conclude negotiations in time for them to join in 2007. Accession negotiations with Turkey will begin in October 2005. See: Enlargement and social policy; Enlargement of the European Union; Intergovernmental Conference (IGC)
No records Found
afaatim.com copyright © April 2016 Dr.K.R.Kamaal. All rights reserved