Scholz heads to Western Balkans to help EU membership bid
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[June 10, 2022]
By Sarah Marsh
BERLIN (Reuters) -German Chancellor Olaf
Scholz sets off on a two-day tour of the Western Balkans on Friday in a
bid to help reinvigorate their long-stalled campaign for European Union
membership, ease regional tensions and fend off the influence of rival
powers such as Russia.
Russia's invasion of Ukraine has lent a new sense of urgency to the need
to tie Montenegro, Serbia, Albania, North Macedonia, Bosnia and
Herzegovina and Kosovo closer to the 27-member EU, whether through full
membership or an alternative community.
Scholz's visit comes hot on the heels of that of European Council
President Charles Michel and ahead of an EU-Western Balkans leaders'
summit on June 23.
The prospect of EU membership had for years been the main driver of
reform and greater cooperation in the region after a decade of war and
upheaval in the 1990s, until EU expansion stalled, spawning
disillusionment.
Unresolved conflicts there have given rise to new tensions lately, such
as the pro-Russian Bosnian Serbs' secession plans.
"The fact it hasn't happened is a real problem and the growing influence
of other countries like Russia and China is a result of this process not
developing," said Florian Bieber, a Balkan expert at Austria's
University of Graz.
SCHOLZ FOREIGN POLICY PRIORITY
Scholz's government, which took office in December, has made the Western
Balkans' EU accession a foreign policy priority.
"We will not surrender this region in the heart of Europe to Moscow's
influence," said Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock when she paid a
visit there in March.
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German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and Kosovo's Prime Minister Albin
Kurti shake hands during a news conference in Berlin, Germany May 4,
2022. REUTERS/Hannibal Hanschke
The question is whether the new government is able to
come up with a real strategy to push the process forward or whether
it will simply "muddle along" like former Chancellor Angela Merkel,
who professed her support for the region but did little to change
the dynamics, said Bieber.
Scholz will visit first Kosovo and then Serbia on Friday, after
meeting with the leaders of both countries last month in Berlin.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov had also been set to visit
Serbia, which is trying to balance its EU aspirations with its
centuries-old alliance with the Kremlin, this week. But his visit
was cancelled when nearby countries closed their airspace.
The German chancellor is set to travel later to Thessaloniki in
Greece for dinner with representatives of the South East European
Cooperation Process (SEECP), a 12-country Balkan regional body.
On Saturday, he travels on to North Macedonia and Bulgaria, which
are locked in a dispute preventing the start of accession talks for
the former country.
(Reporting by Sarah Marsh in Berlin; Additional Reporting by Ivana
Sekularac in Belgrade; Editing by Alex Richardson)
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