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Merkel sets ‘tough line’

RIGA: German Chancellor Angela Merkel told the EU’s eastern partners on Thursday not to expect too much of the bloc and warned Russia to mend its ways over Ukraine if it wanted to rejoin the G7 club of top nations.At the same time, Merkel, who has played a key role

By our correspondents
May 22, 2015
RIGA: German Chancellor Angela Merkel told the EU’s eastern partners on Thursday not to expect too much of the bloc and warned Russia to mend its ways over Ukraine if it wanted to rejoin the G7 club of top nations.
At the same time, Merkel, who has played a key role in Ukraine peace efforts, said Russia had no reason to fear closer ties between the 28-nation bloc and six of its Soviet-era satellites.
“The Eastern Partnership is not aimed against anyone, especially not against Russia,” Merkel told the German parliament before leaving for the two-day summit in the Latvian capital Riga.
At the talks, EU leaders will reaffirm their commitment to developing political and economic ties with Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine, according to a draft communique seen by AFP.
They aim to build on the November 2013 Vilnius summit which ended in chaos when Ukraine’s then president, the pro-Russian Viktor Yanukovych, baulked at signing an EU association accord alongside Georgia and Moldova.
His refusal sparked massive pro-EU protests that led to his ouster in February 2014, then to Russia’s annexation of Crimea and a bloody conflict in eastern Ukraine with pro-Russian rebels.
Ukraine’s pro-Western President Petro Poroshenko completed the agreement last year and wants ultimately to join the EU but all the signs are that this can only be a very long-term objective at best.
The Eastern Partnership is “not an instrument” of EU enlargement, Merkel said. “We must not therefore arouse false expectations which we cannot later fulfil.”
The Ukraine crisis has however revealed deep differences within the bloc over how to deal with Russia.
EU foreign affairs head Federica Mogherini believes it has to find a modus vivendi with Moscow, while some member states such as Britain warn against showing any weakness, especially when it comes to easing sanctions against Russia.
The EU said in March it would adjust policy towards its neighbours to take into account their specific circumstances and, crucially, their links — past and present — with other countries.
Merkel also warned Russia it could not think about returning to the Group of Seven major industrialised nations as long as it flouted international law in Ukraine — symbolised by the annexation of Crimea.
Russia’s membership made the G7 the G8 but its partners suspended it last year, refusing to attend a summit in Sochi hosted by Russian President Vladimir Putin in protest at Moscow’s support for the rebels in Ukraine.