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ACCESSION OF CROATIA TO THE EUROPEAN UNION


''This article treats the 'accession of Croatia to the European Union'.''
Croatia applied for EU membership in 2003, and the European Commission recommended making it an official candidate in early 2004. Candidate country status was granted to Croatia by the European Council (the EU's heads of government) in mid-2004. The entry negotiations, while originally set for March 2005, began in October that year, also launching the screening process.
After Slovenia, Croatia has recovered best from the break-up of the former Yugoslavia and so hopes to become the second former Yugoslav state to become a member. It has a stable market economy and it is ahead of EU member states Bulgaria and Romania in some economic indicators such as GDP per capita.



Contents
Issues of dispute
ICTY cooperation
Border disagreements
Land ownership
Negotiation progress
Timeline
Possible accession dates
See also
References
External links

Issues of dispute


ICTY cooperation

Logo of the accession negotiations

Croatia has had to extradite several of its citizens to the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY), an issue that was often contentious in domestic politics.
Croatia's relations with the court had continuously been cited by the EU officials as something that required further improvement. Ratification of the EU Stabilisation and Association Agreement with Croatia had been stalled because of this.
The flag of Croatia and the European flag, on a building of Ministry of Foreign Affairs and European integration, in Zagreb

The European Council, after its summit of December 20, 2004, set the following March 17 as the date to start entry negotiations, provided that Croatia continued to cooperate fully with the ICTY. On March 16, 2005 – the day before talks were to begin – the EU postponed the commencement of negotiations, because the ICTY prosecution assessed the Croatian efforts to capture the fugitive general Ante Gotovina (indicted by the ICTY for war crimes and crimes against humanity, but at large since 2001) as neither timely nor sufficient.
On December 7, 2005 Spanish Police finally arrested Ante Gotovina with the help of the Spanish and Croatian governments on the Spanish island of Tenerife, located in the Canary Islands. He was brought to The Hague to be tried for war crimes. With the arrest of Ante Gotovina this issue seems to be now resolved, and entry negotiations have began anew, after the certification of ICTY chief prosecutor Carla Del Ponte that Croatia now fully cooperates with the ICTY.
Border disagreements

Croatia must also contend with long-standing border issues with Slovenia – a series of border disputes could yet threaten Slovenia's support for Croatia's accession, but good trade relations have thus far precluded this.
''See:'' Relations of Croatia with Slovenia
Land ownership

Free acquisition of real estate by foreigners is a sensitive issue in Croatia.
This matter particularly concerns the Italians, especially in Istria. While it has strong cultural and historic ties with Italy, the events surrounding World War II, when Istria changed hands between the Kingdom of Italy and SFR Yugoslavia, are more pertinent to the current issues. Numerous Italian politicians have expressed their discontent concerning the current inability of Italians to purchase land in Croatia, considering it discriminatory treatment, and stating that this issue should be resolved as soon as possible.
Croatia denies discrimination, indicating that Croatian legislation provides for the same treatment of all EU citizens concerning this issue. In mid-2006 Croatia and Italy agreed, and now Italian citizens may purchase land in Croatia, and Croatian citizens may purchase land in Italy. The same kind of measures, concerning this issue, have been employed by many new EU member countries before their own accession the EU. Examples of this include Slovenia, Slovakia, Poland, and especially Malta.
''See:'' Relations of Croatia with Italy

Negotiation progress


'Acquis chapter'Progress
'1. Free Movement of Goods' fs
'2. Freedom of Movement for Workers' fs
'3. Right of Establishment & Freedom to provide Services' o
'4. Free Movement of Capital' fs
'5. Public Procurement' fs
'6. Company Law' o
'7. Intellectual Property Law' o
'8. Competition Policy' fs
'9. Financial Services' o
'10. Information Society & Media' o
'11. Agriculture & Rural Development' fs
'12. Food safety, Veterinary & Phytosanitary Policy' fs
'13. Fisheries' fs
'14. Transport Policy' fs
'15. Energy' fs
'16. Taxation' fs
'17. Economic & Monetary Policy' o
'18. Statistics' o
'Acquis chapter'Progress
'19. Social Policy & Employment'2 fs
'20. Enterprise & Industrial Policy' o
'21. Trans-European Networks' fs
'22. Regional Policy & Coordination of Structural Instruments' fs
'23. Judiciary & Fundamental Rights' fs
'24. Justice, Freedom & Security' fs
'25. Science & Research' x
'26. Education & Culture' x
'27. Environment' fs
'28. Consumer & Health Protection' fs
'29. Customs Union' o
'30. External Relations' fs
'31. Foreign, Security & Defence Policy' fs
'32. Financial Control' o
'33. Financial & Budgetary Provisions' fs
'34. Institutions' -
'35. Other Issues' -
   

2 Including anti-discrimination and equal opportunities for men and women.
(brackets): expected date situation of policy area at the 'start' of membership negotiations, according to [1].
's' - screening of the chapter
'fs' - finished screening
'o' - open chapter
'x' - provisionally closed chapter

Timeline


DateEvent
October 29, 2001 Croatia signs the Stabilisation and Association Agreement (SAA)
February 21, 2003 Formal application for membership submitted
October 9, 2003 Croatia submits answers to the Commission's Questionnaire
April 20, 2004 European Commission replies to the answers with a positive opinion (Avis)
June 18, 2004 Croatia receives official candidate status
December 20, 2004 European Council sets the date for the entry negotiations to begin March 17, 2005
February 1, 2005 SAA comes into force
March 16, 2005 Negotiations postponed
October 3, 2005 The beginning of negotiations
October 20, 2005 Beginning of the screening process
June 12, 2006 Opening and closing of the Science & Research chapter of the Acquis communautaire
June 28, 2006 Opening of the Competition Policy and Customs Union chapters of the Acquis
December 11, 2006 Opening and closing of the Education & Culture chapter of the Acquis
June 26, 2007 Opening of six chapters of the Acquis: Right of Establishment & Freedom to provide Services, Company Law, Financial Services, Information Society & Media, Statistics and Financial Control

Possible accession dates



In June 2006, the EU officials projected that the accession of Croatia would likely happen in 2009 or 2010. The closure of negotiations for all chapters of the ''acquis communautaire'' is expected in 2008 or 2009, while signing the Accession treaty would happen in the year after. Before starting negotiations with Croatia, the ''acquis'' was divided into 35 chapters, 4 more than the previous 31; the new chapters, previously part of the agricultural policy and judiciary, are complex areas - their division into a few smaller chapters is meant to enable more efficient and expedient negotiations.
Originally Croatia had been aiming for a 2007 accession date—such an accomplishment would have broken Slovakia's record of 2.5 years of negotiations to complete the process. It has been remarked by Olli Rehn that the EU does expect a similar speed from Croatia. Still, the EU needs to solve its internal problems before accommodating any new member after 2007; under the current Treaty of Nice, the EU cannot function with more than 27 member states. The EU Constitution would have had this problem solved, but its rejection made any future accession more difficult, requiring additional administrative reforms.
In June 2006 commissioner Rehn stated that there will be no further enlargement of the European Union in this decade other than the 2007 accession of Bulgaria and Romania, due to the impasse in EU treaty reform following the rejection of the European Constitution in France and The Netherlands. Nevertheless Croatia will probably be the "first to meet all necessary conditions" and therefore be "the next country on the list", according to Rehn.[1]
A new EU treaty, which has been suggested to be drafted by 2009, should erase all legal blocks currently preventing accession by Croatia to the Union. With the entry into force of that treaty – probably May 2009 – Croatia will be able to join the European Union.
On the 25 April 2007 the European Parliament congratulated Croatia for making "rapid progress" towards membership, but stated that "it must make further efforts in areas such as cooperation with the ICTY, reform of the judiciary and the transition to a market economy".[2] MEPs also stressed the need for a new institutional framework for the EU by 2008 in order to accommodate Croatia.

See also



Foreign relations of Croatia

Enlargement of the European Union

References


1. Euractiv.com - Croatia will not join EU before 2010 - URL accessed on June 12, 2006.
2. European Parliament, Croatia: Good progress towards accession and some issues remain, 25 April 2007, accessed 27 April 2007

External links



'Official website - Negotiations for the Accession of the Republic of Croatia to the European Union'

Official EU-website concerning enlargement


Website of the European Commission concerning the enlargement process

BBC News: inside Europe: EU enlargement

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