EU leaders renew fraying Union's vows on
60th anniversary
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[March 25, 2017]
By Alastair Macdonald and Jan Strupczewski
ROME (Reuters) - Europeans must contain
their squabbling and carping about the EU if the Union is to survive,
leaders warned on Saturday as they marked the 60th anniversary of its
founding in Rome by signing a formal declaration of unity.
Four days before Prime Minister Theresa May, absent from the ceremony in
the Italian capital, delivers an unprecedented blow to the bloc's growth
by filing Britain's formal exit papers, her fellow leaders hailed 60
years of peace and prosperity and pledged to deepen a unity frayed by
regional and global crises.
But days of wrangling about the wording of a 1,000-word Rome
Declaration, May's impending Brexit confirmation and tens of thousands
of protesters gathering beyond the tight police cordon around the
Campidoglio palace offered a more sober reminder of the challenges of
holding the 27 nations to a common course.
"We have stopped in our tracks and this has caused a crisis of rejection
by public opinion," said their host, Italian Prime Minister Paolo
Gentiloni, noting Britons' repudiation of the EU.
He said the failure to push the project forward during a decade of
economic slump had fueled a re-emergence of "blinkered nationalism".
Rome offered a fresh start: "The Union is starting up again ... and has
a vision for the next 10 years," he said.
Others, however, are wary of such enthusiasm for giving up more national
sovereignty -- and also of others in the Union moving faster with
integration. Poland's nationalist government has led protests against a
"multispeed Europe", which it fears would consign the poor ex-communist
east to second-class status.
Leaders hailed the visionary "war generation" of leaders from old foes
France and Germany who signed the Treaty of Rome in the same room on
March 25, 1957, along with Italy, Belgium, Luxembourg and the
Netherlands; some offered personal memories of their own generation's
debts to the expanding European Union.
Luxemburger Jean-Claude Juncker, the EU chief executive, recalled his
father's forced service in the World War Two German army; Donald Tusk,
the summit chairman, born in Gdansk a month after the Treaty was signed,
remembered growing up in the ruins of war and yearning for freedom
behind the Iron Curtain.
"That really was a two-speed Europe," he said in a pointed dig at his
domestic foes now ruling in Warsaw, who have tried to block a push by
the western powers to deepen their integration.
"UNITED, OR NOT AT ALL"
Fearing that the departure of its second-biggest economy and major
global power could prompt the unraveling of the bloc, many leaders argue
that only forward motion can revive popular support for the EU by
generating economic and security benefits.
"Today we renew our vows and reaffirm our commitment to an undivided and
indivisible Union," Juncker told them, urging the bloc not to get bogged
down in details that alienated voters.
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(from L to R) Malta's Prime Minister Joseph Muscat, European Council
President Donald Tusk, Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras and
Italy's Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni pose for a picture outside
the city hall "Campidoglio" (Capitoline Hill) as EU leaders arrive
for a meeting on the 60th anniversary of the Treaty of Rome, in
Rome, Italy March 25, 2017. REUTERS/Tony Gentile
Tusk, too, warned against the impression the EU was about petty
regulations: "Why should we lose our trust in the purpose of unity
today? Is it only because it has become our reality? Or because we
have become bored or tired of it?" he asked.
"Europe as a political entity will either be united, or will not be
at all ... The unity of Europe is not a bureaucratic model. It is a
set of common values and democratic standards."
German Chancellor Angela Merkel told reporters that leaders wanted
to respond to people's concerns, about the economy, immigration and
military threats with "a protective Europe".
All 27 national leaders, along with the heads of Brussels
institutions, signed a declaration which concluded: "We have united
for the better. Europe is our common future."
They promised to listen to citizens. But locked away behind rings of
armed police, the leaders may hear little of what thousands of
protesters have to say on Saturday.
For Ernesto Rapani, an official of Italy's right-wing eurosceptic
Fratelli d'Italia party attending a demonstration in Rome, the
bloc's trade and financial rules are skewed in favor of Germany and
have to change: "At the moment the union is convenient for Germany
and not Italy," he said.
At the Vatican on Friday, Pope Francis said the Union had achieved
much in 60 years but that Europe faced a "vacuum of values". He
condemned anti-immigrant populism and extremism that he said posed a
mortal threat to the bloc.
(Additional reporting by Isla Binnie; Writing by Alastair Macdonald;
Editing by Crispian Balmer and Helen Popper)
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