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Albania will not ‘cry at Europe’s door’, says PM

February 07, 2020

TIRANA: Albania will not “stay at Europe´s door and cry” for it to open, Prime Minister Edi Rama told AFP, stressing that the Balkan state must focus on its own future while Brussels sorts out thorny questions over its admissions process.

The country of 2.8 million hoped to get the greenlight to start EU entry talks in October, but France, Denmark and the Netherlands vetoed the move.

Neighbouring North Macedonia´s bid was also put on hold due to resistance chiefly from Paris. The French-led “non” outraged many in the Balkans and in the EU, where most member states had wanted to reward the two countries for pushing through significant reforms. Brussels is now redoubling efforts to get all member states on board to approve the start of Albania and North Macedonia´s talks at a summit in May. Prime Minister Rama, however, is not holding his breath. “I do not expect anything,” Rama, a painter and former basketball player, told AFP in an interview conducted in French. “We should do the things that should be done” regardless of decisions in Brussels, he said, adding that the country cannot “continue to live with this anxiety of waiting for something that is out of our hands”. “We will not stay at Europe´s door and cry,” said the 55-year-old, who was wearing a long black coat and sneakers. “We are not on this path because the French or the Germans are asking us, but because it is the only reasonable path for the future of our children and for the future of this country,” he said. Rama added that the EU´s own reforms are far from Tirana´s control, though “it is important for us too that Europe changes”. Europe “is suffering, it doesn´t work as it should, that´s clear.

In order to placate French demands to rework the EU´s entry requirements before opening the gate to new members, the European Commission proposed a tougher and more political admissions process this week. For Tirana, the main areas under scrutiny are its efforts to root out corruption and organised crime, as well as to strengthen rule of law. The country has carried out intensive justice reforms since 2016, with hundreds of judges and prosecutors vetted for any links to crime or other unethical conduct. While Brussels has applauded this process, a progress report in 2019 still noted that “corruption is prevalent in many areas” in the Balkan state.

The next report is due at the end of the month. “Albania did more than any other country for the opening of negotiations,” insisted Rama, who has been in power since 2013.