Briefings
Balkan, der Weg nach Brüssel
Croatie et Serbie, les deux postulantes
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Croatia
Barroso opens door to EU
8 June 20113PresseuropJutarnji List -
Croatia
Pope: EU good for the soul
6 June 2011PresseuropVečernji list -
27 May 2011Nacional Zagreb
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20 April 20113Novi List Rijeka
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Croatia
EU – what's it in aid of?
12 April 2011Tportal Zagreb -
26 October 2010Blic Belgrade
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Serbia
Dark side of the Yugosphere
13 October 2010Il Sole-24 Ore Milan -
9 September 2010PresseuropPolitika
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7 June 2010PresseuropVečernji list
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10 December 2009Presseurop
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7 October 2009PresseuropDer Standard
Une région en quête d'elle-même
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Editorial
Balkan blues
27 May 20111Presseurop -
Interview
Saviano: Mafia has conquered Balkans
11 March 20112Foreign Policy România Bucarest -
8 March 2011PresseuropRzeczpospolita
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EU accession
The Balkan family photo is blurred
21 January 20112Politika Belgrade -
Balkans
The big cleanup begins
23 December 20104Monitor Podgorica -
Balkans
Neither here nor there
30 September 2010Adevărul Bucharest -
Balkans
Montenegro – come if you're rich
26 August 2010The New York Times New York -
4 May 20101Kapital Sofia
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8 February 20103Globus-Skopje Skopje
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22 October 20091Wprost Warsaw
Bruxelles face aux Balkans compliqués
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Institutions
EU grows weary of enlargement
10 November 20101Presseurop -
Balkans
Hail Albania!
25 November 20091The Guardian London -
EU enlargement
Auditors find "black hole" of the Balkans
14 October 2009PresseuropTrouw -
13 October 20091Novi List Rijeka
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European Commission
The three next big things
22 September 2009El País Madrid -
Bosnia-Herzegovina
Have passport, can't travel
3 September 2009BH Dani Sarajevo -
EU enlargement
Never mind the Balkans, here's Iceland
31 July 20092El País Madrid -
Balkans
Frustrated expectations
15 July 2009The Guardian London
In arresting one of the generals responsible for the Srebrenica massacre, Serbian authorities have demonstrated their desire to close a dark chapter in their history. But several questions remain about Ratko Mladic’s flight from justice.
The conviction of former General Gotovina for war crimes on April 15 has been received very badly by a people who consider him a hero of the wars in former Yugoslavia. But this verdict is also a chance to think about what happened, a Croatian columnist writes.
"For or against joining the EU?" Between now and the end of the year, the citizens of Croatia will be called on to answer a question they increasingly see as irrelevant. Having overcome many obstacles on the road to accession, they are no longer interested in a Europe that is strongly associated with their country’s discredited political elite.
On 25 October, the union’s 27 member states decided to forward Belgrade’s request for EU accession to the European Commission. But the process that is now underway will still have to overcome a significant number of obstacles, reports Serbian daily Blic.
With Serbia’s candidacy for EU accession up for review at the end of the month, the tension fomented by Serb ultranationalists is mounting dangerously: witness Serb hooligans’ recent attacks on the Gay Pride parade in Belgrade and at the Italy-Serbia match in Genoa.
After years of gridlock, the EU 27 have now decided to get the Serbian accession talks going again. Whilst delighted by the EU’s green light for Serbia’s free trade agreement, the Serb press says Belgrade still has a long way to go before it can hope for accession.
The Italian Mafia has succeeded in colonising the Balkans and Eastern Europe, announces Roberto Saviano, the author of the novel Gomorrah. In Romania, it manages prostitution networks, which are also linked to drug trafficking and money laundering.
The population census demanded by Brussels has become a political challenge in most of the countries of the western Balkans. Twenty years after the start of the wars in former Yugoslavia, the venture brings ethnic and social tensions back into the spotlight.
Croatia, Kosovo, Montenegro: in the space of a fortnight, the leaders or ex-leaders of all three countries have been arrested or accused of wrongdoing. Meanwhile, reports a Montenegro weekly, the EU is paving the way for the accession of all three Balkan countries.
A nest of vipers, a powderkeg of ancient hatreds or the cradle of Western civilisation — Europe doesn't know how to view its troublesome southeastern corner. One thing is sure though, it keeps getting its stance wrong.
Eager to join the European Union, Montenegro is cleaning up its image of corruption and pulling out all the stops to attract foreign capital.
After nearly two decades of absurd and counter-productive quarreling, it's high time that Greece and its former Yugoslavian neighbour find a solution to the Macedonian name issue, argues Bulgarian weekly Kapital.
Five centuries of Turkish domination left their mark on culture, cuisine, language and even gestures in Balkan countries. It is an influence that is still apparent in attitudes that have affected the pace of integration in the European Union for a number of Balkan states.
Separated by wars which marked the 1990s, some citizens of the former Yugoslavia are attempting to rebuild the cultural ties, which were a feature of the Titoist state. Today, with encouragement from Europe, political leaders are also beginning to recognize this trend.
For the European press, the publication of the annual “progress report” on prospective candidates for EU accession, has failed to dispel the general apathy that surrounds the question of enlargement.
Europe and America are trying to obtain an agreement between Bosnian leaders on the reform of the constitution of Bosnia-Herzegovina. However, the Croatian daily Novi List reports that the EU appears to be unable to exert much pressure in the negotiations, which may prove crucial to the future of the country.
The re-election of José Manuel Barroso represents an opportunity to “complete” Europe over the next five years and make it a real global player. According to political analyst José Ignacio Torreblanca, the president's focus should be on three major issues: internal cohesion, enlargement and the European Neighbour Policy.
From 1st January, 2010, Muslim Bosnians and Kosovans will be the only citizens of the former Yugoslavia required to obtain visas to enter the European Union. Sarejevo daily, BH Dani, explains how impartial principles will result in discriminatory practice.
The enthusiasm with which member states have welcomed Reykjavik's request for accession to the EU is in marked contrast to the prudence — and in some cases hostility — which has greeted similar requests from the countries of ex-Yugoslavia and Turkey. But the EU cannot afford to give the impression that certain candidates enjoy special privileges.
Croatia's prime minister resigned July 1 because his country's future accession to the EU had been called into question. In Macedonia too, the EU aspirant government is fragile. As the European dream recedes, the more Western Balkan states are destabilised, writes British researcher Ian Bancroft in the Guardian. 