irishtimes.com
7 °C Dublin » RAINMONPARTLY SUNNY WITH SHOWERS8 °C TUERAIN12 °C WEDMOSTLY SUNNY8 °C YOUR WEATHER »
  • RSS Feeds
  • Site Map
  • News
  • Sport
  • Business
  • Comment
  • Life
  • Society
  • Culture
  • Shop
  • Classified
  • Search
  • Browse By Date
  • Historical Timeline
  • Subscriptions
  • Help & FAQ
Close
  • News
  • Ireland
  • World
  • In Depth
  • IrishTimes150
  • Today's Paper
  • Weather
  • Life
  • Travel
  • Food & Drink
  • Style
  • Consumer
  • Homes & Property
  • Motors
  • Living Today
  • Sport
  • Soccer
  • Gaelic Games
  • Golf
  • Rugby
  • Other
  • irishracing.com
  • Society
  • Health
  • Family
  • Education
  • Science
  • Environment
  • News Features
  • People
  • Business
  • Business news
  • Markets
  • Exchange Rates
  • Agenda
  • Personal Finance
  • The Economy
  • Technology
  • Innovation
  • Culture
  • Film
  • Books
  • Stage
  • Music
  • Art & Design
  • Comment & Media
  • Treibh
  • Comment
  • Opinion & Analysis
  • Letters
  • Blogs
  • Polls
  • Blogs
  • Current Account
  • Mechanical Turk
  • megabites
  • MiniBytes
  • On The Record
  • Outside In
  • Politics
  • Pricewatch
  • Pursued by a Bear
  • Screenwriter
  • Shop
  • Page Sales
  • Reader Offers
  • Financial Services
  • Travel Offers
  • Photo Sales
  • DVD Club
  • About us
  • Company information
  • Terms & conditions
  • Advertise
  • Contact us
  • Copyright
  • Privacy policy
  • Help
  • Classified
  • Homes
  • Jobs
  • Cars
  • Dating
  • Family Notices
  • Other
  • Search this site
  • Premium Email
  • Digital edition
  • Print on demand
  • Irish Ancestors
  • Irish Times Training
  • RSS feeds
  • Games
  • Crosswords
  • Sudoku
  • Competitions
  • Home »
  • Sign Up / In To Digital Archive »

Sign up to The Irish Times Archive (1859 - 2008)My Account »

Tue 07 Jul 2008EU ministers divided on relations with Ukraine

EU foreign ministers, divided over further expansion of the bloc, failed to agree at a meeting today on a French plan for future relations with Ukraine.

Divisions emerged between members such as Sweden and Poland which want Ukraine to join the European Union, and those like Belgium and the Netherlands which are cautious about expansion.

The 27-nation bloc wants to cement ties with Ukraine at a September 9th summit, but internal divisions, together with doubts about Ukraine's political stability, make it uncertain how close a relationship Brussels is prepared to offer.

"We still need to see more stability," EU External Relations commissioner Benita Ferrero-Waldner told reporters. "It is true a lot of reforms have taken place but not all of them."

Ukrainian president Viktor Yushchenko, swept to power by the 2004 "Orange Revolution" and keen to join Western blocs like the EU and NATO, said yesterday it was "very important for Ukraine to know its port of destination in this matter" of EU membership.

France, current holder of the EU presidency, proposed that a pact under negotiation on closer ties with Ukraine be called an "Association Agreement", a type of accord the EU can -- but does not necessarily -- see as preparing a country for membership.

An EU official said there was relatively wide support for the proposal but added: "Some think this should be judged in the end, when we know what the substance is, and the negotiations will not be concluded for some months."

Members were also split over whether the summit declaration should state clearly that Ukraine is a European country.

"Everybody agrees that geographically Ukraine is a European country. The problem is that in EU terms this has legal implications," the official said. All European countries have the right to apply for EU membership.

France, Britain, Italy and Spain favour offering Ukraine closer ties, including talks on easing visa rules, and sending positive signals to Kiev without explicitly offering it the prospect of membership.

"The outcome will respect the balance ... not everyone wants the same thing but there will be a balance," the EU official said. "But I think there is a broad consensus that you could say more positive things at the summit without creating any new obligations or commitments."

Mr Yushchenko came to power through street protests against election fraud and immediately began drafting a series of "road maps" to secure membership of Western organisations and move out of the shadow of Russia.

But his administration was beset by quarrels, an "orange" government collapsed within months and ambitions were scaled down. An "orange" cabinet has since been restored, but Yushchenko remains at odds with prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko.

Login or subscribe for more »
Choose a Subscription type - required
  • 1 YearEUR € 395
  • 1 MonthEUR € 65
  • 1 weekEUR € 26
  • 1 DayEUR € 10
  • Corporate Subscription

You don't seem to be Signed In!

If you're already a subscriber. Please sign in below.

Forgot your Login details?

24 Hour Subscription

If you have a 24 hour code. Please sign in below.

  • ADVERTISEMENT
  • CLASSIFIED

    Homes

    Capella Court, Langton Cross, NewbridgeCapella Court, Langton Cross, Newbridge Price: €110,000
    Bedrooms: 2
    See More »
  • Jobs

    Select your categories
    Next »
  • Cars

    Muscular Yeti packs a punchMuscular Yeti packs a punchFind »
  • Dating

    I am a Looking for a Located Next »
© 2009 irishtimes.com
  • Company information
  • Privacy policy
  • Help
  • Contact us
  • Advertise
  • Terms & Conditions