Moldovan Minister for Foreign Affairs on the Eastern Partnership

Published: 7 December 2009 y., Monday

Rankų paspaudimas
On Tuesday, the EU’s foreign ministers and the foreign ministers from the six countries involved in the Eastern Partnership are to meet. It is the first meeting of foreign ministers for the Partnership since its launch in May. Here, Moldovan Minister for Foreign Affairs and European Integration Iurie Leanca speaks of Moldova’s expectations for the Partnership and the meeting.

In addition to the EU and Moldova, the Eastern Partnership includes Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Ukraine and Belarus. The Partnership involves economic cooperation, work for human rights, democracy development and support for reforms. The meeting, which is to be held in Brussels, will address how the implementation of the Partnership has fared since its launch in May and what forms the continued work should take.

“To Moldova, the most important element of the Partnership is the continued strengthening of relations with the EU, the opportunities for an Association Agreement, a free trade agreement and visa liberalisation”, says Minister for Foreign Affairs Iurie Leanca.

Better future

Moldova has approximately 4 million inhabitants. The country is situated just east of Romania and thus  borders on the EU. Mr Leanca explains that Moldova is emerging from a difficult economic and political time.
“We have gone from authoritarian rule to democracy, we have many problems to resolve and we need help in order to do this. Many Moldovans have left the country as there has been no future for them here. But we hope that closer relations with the EU will contribute to economic development and political stability. Then our citizens can have a better future and people will be able to return.”

The EU too can benefit from the Partnership

Foreign Minister Leanca believes that the EU can benefit from having stable and prosperous neighbours.
“And by creating stability and economic development, the influx of migrants and smuggling will be curbed.”
The countries involved in the Partnership vary greatly in, for example, size and political situation, but this is not something Foreign Ministers Leanca looks upon as a problem.
“The Partnership stipulates differentiated treatment. The countries all have different populations, territories and problems. But that is also the case within the EU, all countries in the Union are different, but the regional approach works.”

The meeting

At the meeting on Tuesday, Foreign Minister Leanca has the ambition to discuss projects within the areas of border control, energy efficiency and institutional capacity building.
“We want to use all opportunities granted to us by the Partnership. Moldova may be the smallest of the Partnership countries, but we want to become a role model for how the Partnership is to be implemented and we want to move in the right direction.”

 

Šaltinis: europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Program Update on Madagascar

Effective March 17, 2009, the World Bank’s operations in Madagascar have been guided by its Operational Policy OP 7.30, Dealing with de facto Governments, and no fund withdrawal requests have been processed since that date, with few exceptions (see below). more »

EU and Vietnam To Launch Free Trade Negotiations

The EU and Vietnam have agreed to launch bilateral Free Trade Agreement (FTA) negotiations following a meeting between EU Trade Commissioner Karel De Gucht and Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung in Hanoi today. more »

France hit freaks storms

Several popular French tourist destinations remain underwater as the full extent of freak storms becomes clear. more »

The EU approves emergency aid of three million Euros for Chile

The European Commission (EC) has approved three million euros of emergency aid in response to the situation caused by the earthquake that shook Chile on Saturday and has caused over 300 deaths. more »

EU to expand Operation Atalanta against piracy in the Indian Ocean and will begin training Somalia's security forces

The ministers of defence of the European Union agreed on Wednesday to expand the objectives of Operation Atalanta to include control of Somali ports where pirate ships are based, as well as the possibility of “neutralising” the mother ships that allow the pirates to operate more than 1,000 km from the coast. more »

EU Cohesion Policy's future discussed in Zaragoza

The EU's Cohesion Policy and its future is the focal point of the discussions by representatives of the EU-27, who have been invited by Spain's Secretary of State for the Treasury and Budgets, Carlos Ocaña, to attend the Informal Meeting of Regional Policy Ministers this Friday in Zaragoza. more »

Haiti on our minds

Commission calls for €90m more in aid for the quake-stricken country, to be drawn from EU emergency funds. more »

EU, USA and UN start to plan for relocation of one million Haitians at the height of the rainy season

The EU, the USA and the UN are going to divide up the workload in order to provide shelter for more than one million Haitians before the rains, which have already started in the Caribbean country, get any worse. more »

Burma: MEPs demand Aung San Suu Kyi release

MEPs discussed Burma and its long-suffering people in Parliament on 11 February. more »

The EU to analyse Haiti reconstruction plans and the UN Millennium Goals

European post-earthquake aid to Haiti, the UN Millennium Development Goals (MDG) and transatlantic cooperation will be the focus of the EU Informal Meeting of Ministers for Development, to be held on 17 and 18 February in La Granja (Segovia). more »