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France Marine Le Pen: EU robbed us of all liberties, we should fight to get them back (Interview)

June 9, 2014 By administrator

By Sophie Shevardnadze RT

Elections to the European Parliament have brought groundbreaking changes in the structure of EU’s most powerful body: right wing parties along with Eurosceptics, an Marine-Le-Penoutsiders just a few years ago, have now taken the political scene. Front Nacional party in France gets the majority – signifying that people want change; the same with other nations. But what now? Is the European change of course inevitable? What will happen to the Union itself? Today, we meet again with our special guest, the leader of the Front Nacional party. Marine Le Pen is on Sophie&Co today.

Sophie Shevardnadze: Last time we talked you predicted in the EU elections you’d become the number one party in France – and here we are. What’s the very first thing you want to do?

Marine Le Pen: The first thing that I will do is constitute a group in the European parliament to be able to prevent any new advances towards European federalism, which I consider to be profoundly anti-democratic. I believe that it goes against the sovereignty of the people and the economic, social, and international interests of France. So, along with our allies, we will now be able to provide a new voice, different from the one which dominates in the European union.

SS: When you look at the bigger picture, the eurosceptics are in the minority in the chamber and they aren’t even forming a bloc yet, there was no “global victory”. So why all this talk of a political earthquake?

MP: Believe me, we saw the faces of the people here in Brussels who saw us come pouring in, I think they believe that our presence will decidedly change the appearance of the European parliament and, evidently, of the debates that will take place in the parliament.

SS: How big is the problem of these “eurocommissioners” you want to get rid of? Has the sovereignty issue gotten so serious?

MP: Sovereignty is the foundation of democracy. Without sovereignty, there is no democracy, because having the freedom to cast a ballot in a ballot box is one thing, but if the people you elected with your ballot have no power because the actual power was transferred to a supranational body, then we are no longer in a democratic process. And this is exactly what we are currently going through. I think it was in 1957, in the National Assembly, Mendès France said that there are two ways to establish totalitarianism – either all of the powers are united together, or we transfer all the power to a supranational body. Well, that’s exactly what they did by building the European Union – they transferred the sovereignty of the people to a supranational body that is not elected, that has no legitimacy and that imposes its will on the people. This is true for our territorial sovereignty – we are no longer in control of our immigration policy, since with Schengen all of our borders are open; this is true for our monetary sovereignty, since we are no longer in control of our currency; our budgetary sovereignty – it has just been transferred to the European Union, but also our legislative sovereignty, since currently 80% of the laws which are voted in the French National Assembly are actually a transcription of European directives. Well, I consider that France is a free country and that it should stay that way. And since we were robbed of all of our liberties, we should fight to get them back from the hands of those that stole them without our knowledge and against our will.

SS: A little while back there was talk about the new rising superpower – the European Union. These elections showed that the bloc is far from being a universally approved, superstate. Will Europe never unite now?

MP: Europe is not at stake; it is the European Union that is at stake. Europe exists, and it consists of nations whose wealth lies in their uniqueness, their sovereignty, their freedom, their democracy. So, I am for a Europe of nations – I wish that tomorrow we can constitute a Europe that could expand, but to countries that have preserved their sovereignty and that would work together on cooperative projects. This is what works, and this is what I want to implement, but in order to do this, we have to deconstruct this European Union.

SS: I had a member of An Alternative for Germany group here the other day – he wants to divide the Eurozone into North and South. Do you think this is a solution?

MP: No, I think that this is utopian. I think that we are trying to stick plasters on a structure that was faulty from the beginning. As far as the Euro, since it is really about the Euro, they want to make a Northern Euro-zone and a Southern Euro-zone. But, in this case, what is the advantage for Southern countries to continue to have the euro imposed on them? It would be better if they re-establish their national currency, and adapt the level of their national currency to their economy to boost growth, employment, and exports. Now, if Germany wants to keep a Euro-mark zone around their territory- that is their responsibility. If they see their interests there, they are free to do it. But we have no interest in integrating a ‘sub-Euro’ structure.

SS:You’ve said you want to defend French interests in the EU against Germany – what are those French interests that German policy is infringing upon?

MP: Let things be clear- I am not a Germanophobe. This wouldn’t make any sense. I cannot be mad at Germany for defending its interests. I simply find that their interests are divergent from ours. It is that simple. I criticize the French leaders for not defending France’s interests and for defending Germany’s interests. For example, in the case of the Euro – we can see that the Euro was created for and by Germany. The Euro is custom tailored, but in a way that fits only Germany and not any other country of the European Union. I want something tailored for me, and for this I want a national currency. Especially since currency is a part of sovereignty. There: one currency, one country. This is the way that 95% of the countries in the world function, by the way. If tomorrow we go back to our national currencies, German marks would be overvalued compared with the Euro. Our new francs would be devalued compared with the Euro. We would therefore benefit, and Germany would be at a loss. Currently, Germany is profiting from the Euro, since they have a currency which is structurally devalued, which gives them a considerable competitive advantage. So, this European Union has fallen under the domination of Germany since Germany has managed to impose its views on all of the other countries, and we end up martyrs. From the point of view of the economy, of employment, of society, we have suffered a considerable loss in the last few years, and I will not continue to accept the suffering of the French people to placate Madame Merkel.

SS: Obviously you are not a big fan of the austerity policies that are in you view ruining Europe. But what else needs to be done to combat the debt crises?

MP: Surely not to do this, in any case. Because the austerity policies that have been implemented have shown not only their injustice but their futility, their inefficiency. The laboratory of these austerity policies is Greece. Just look at Greece : we sent the Greeks back to the Middle Ages, their youth unemployment rate is at 60%, 30% for the rest of the workforce, a drop in unemployment compensation, a drop in salaries, a drop in civil servant bonuses. They no longer have access to appropriate health care, suicide rates have doubled, and there’s been a 50% increase in the infant mortality rate.. Is this progress? Is this what we were promised? This is a disgrace, it is scandalous! And moreover, it doesn’t reduce deficit or debt. Greece’s deficit and its debts are still increasing. This is why I say that the austerity policies are both inefficient in attaining their objectives, which is reducing deficit, but they are also profoundly unjust and almost inhumane when we look at the fact that in some hospitals in Greece, when women come to give birth, they given their baby only in exchange for a bill to pay for their delivery.

SS: Who would you rather see as head of the European Commission?

MP: I completely don’t care, they are all interchangeable. This is a legend for yuppies and for Europhiles. We tell them: “Look, Juncker!” etc., while in reality they are all the same, completely the same! The president of the commission is the warden of the prison, that’s it. But he is there to enforce the application of the rules. So whoever the warden is, he will apply the rules inside the prison. This is exactly what the head of the commission does. What counts is who will best apply the ultra-liberal policy, the transfer of sovereignty, the expansions they want to impose on various European populations, the signature of the Trans-Atlantic treaty with the United States, which we formally contest and which we will fight tooth and nail.

SS: On events in Ukraine – you’ve called the EU an “antidemocratic monster”, which has made things worse with its offers of partnership to Kiev. How exactly?

MP: Listen, obviously when the European Union made this partnership proposal to Ukraine, this basically meant a rupture of their relationship with Russia, it was a kind of blackmail that could only fuel the divisions of Ukraine, since we know that within the country, there are citizens in the East which look towards Russia and some in the West which look towards the European Union. We were well aware of this. And fuelling these divisions was obviously putting in place conditions for a danger of civil war. So the European Union started the initial fire and since then has only aggravated the situation via threats, blackmail and sanctions, which we can clearly see do not contribute to bringing everyone to the table to find a peaceful and reasonable resolution to this conflict.

SS: You’ve said the EU is responsible for the situation in Ukraine – did it ever know what it was getting into?

MP: By definition, it is not up to me to defend the competency of these bodies. To not know this would be tragic – such geopolitical ignorance seems astounding to me. Nevertheless, the result is there – the European Union did not play the role that it could have played, and it contributed to aggravating the situation. What is really a shame is that countries like France no longer have a diplomatic voice – because here is a conflict in which France, if it had kept a strong political voice, a balancing voice like the one I want it to recover, it could totally manage to overcome these difficulties. The diplomacy of the European Union is a catastrophe, and not only in Ukraine – each time the European Union participates on the global stage, it is usually either to create a problem or to aggravate it.

SS: Is imposing sanctions on Russia a sign that the EU’s foreign policy is subordinated to the U.S.? How far will the EU go with those?

MP: I don’t know, maybe eventually the European Union will have to face reality and come to the conclusion that it is not to its advantage to bend to America’s will. In any case, that is what I hope, because these sanctions have contributed to strengthening everyone’s opposing positions, which makes no sense. We were completely aware of the fact that Russia, faced with these sanctions, wouldn’t say: “Oh, well if it’s going to be like that, no problem, do what you want”. That doesn’t make any sense. The sanctions that were imposed, including those imposed on Russian deputies and even the president of the Duma, which are even more problematic, are a rupture in historical traditions on a diplomatic level. Generally, we do not sanction deputies because they are the expression of the people. So I am under the impression that there are no more rules, except maybe the ones imposed by the United States, which once again defend their own interests, but their interests are not ours.

SS: Can Ukraine ever become an EU member? Do you think it should?

MP: Obviously not, obviously not! Once again – here, when the European Union promised to let Ukraine become part of it, it clearly contributed to the exacerbation of tensions within Ukraine. Ukraine will not become part of the European Union. We won’t tell tales – Ukraine absolutely doesn’t have the economic level to become part of the EU. And, once again, it is a long way down the list. I am opposed to any new expansion, so I say this with no judgement whatsoever. I feel friendship towards the Ukrainians, so I wouldn’t invite my friends to the table of nightmares. I want to leave the European Union, so I can’t invite them to join.

SS: The G7 condemned Russia for the situation in Ukraine, vowed more sanctions…Why are Western leaders calling on Russia and President Putin to end the violence, and not the government in Kiev, the newly-elected president they’ve been meeting with?

MP: That’s a good question. Because we are at the culmination of a Cold War that has been fought against Russia by the United States, to which the European capitals have completely submitted on an international level. It’s as simple as that, and a shame as well. And I would like to seize this opportunity to express my compassion and my sadness and my disgust to see these civil victims in the East of Ukraine, who are dying surrounded by the general indifference of the European political world and media. It is a real scandal which is happening on our doorstep, and you are right to say that from the moment Ukraine has a legitimate government, it is the government which must take responsibility. But for this, we would need to demand that the Ukrainian government dismantle and disarm the reigning militia, which would most likely embarrass a number of people.

SS: The elections in Ukraine were quick to be accepted by the major powers in the West – despite the civil war that’s going on in the country and the fact that there was no vote in the country’s rebellious East. At the same time, the elections in Syria, were branded illegitimate even before they were held. Why?

MP: Yes, but this has been happening for years! I mean, such and such decides who is on the good side and who is on the bad side. And this can change at any moment. The good guys of today will be the bad guys of tomorrow, and maybe the bad guys of today will become good tomorrow, if Washington decides that it is to their advantage to make them good. It is a shame, since there is a substantial amount of mistakes that have been made at an international level under Washington’s influence, especially in Syria. We were the only ones among the French political parties to oppose intervention in Syria, the first and only ones who, from the beginning, said that we were arming Islamic fundamentalists, who would, if they did win, implement a reign of terror like they did in Libya. This was, once again, because of us. We helped them come to power. This is the American method, the international American method: they defend their interests, or they think that they are defending them, since sometimes they make serious mistakes. What is terrible is that European countries no longer have a say in things. There are no more sovereign nations in Europe that can be the voice of reason for peaceful settlement of conflicts, the voice of balance between different interests of different nations.

SS: Obama said the security of America’s European allies is sacrosanct, promising to boost U.S. military deployments and exercises around Europe. Does Europe need this kind of support?

MP: To defend ourselves against whom? […] To defend ourselves against whom? Well, you know that we are for leaving NATO, for France leaving NATO, we have a Gaullian vision of what international politics must be like, we are for developing our relations with Russia, without breaking ties with the United States. We believe that France must maintain its relations with all of the world’s great nations, and we do not want to be imposed with a way of seeing things by anybody. We aspire to have the freedom to determine the quality and the level of our international relations. But… to defend ourselves against whom? When we asked this question to a French politician, his answer was “China”. It almost makes you laugh. We can clearly see that, as a matter of fact, this is an opportunity for the United States to carry out military integration, and maybe tomorrow, economic integration, to extend the scope of its influence. The free-trade agreement that the United States want to sign at any price is really just another way to tie the European Union, in a quasi-definitive way, to the United States. This is, once again, a loss of independence, not to mention the catastrophic consequences that this free-trade agreement would have for us in terms of agriculture, industry, defence, etc. So this is much more a geopolitical treaty than a purely commercial or economic treaty.

SS: After your success – what now? Running for President in 2017?

MP: Listen, if the followers of my movement put their trust in me, since we have an upcoming congress in November, where I will run to be re-elected as the head of the Front National. If I am re-elected as the head of the FN, then I will obviously be a candidate for the future presidential elections, which may take place earlier than we expected, either the presidential or the legislative elections, given the extremely low level of support for the President of the Republic, François Hollande.

SS: So you believe elections may take place earlier than scheduled?

MP: That is what François Hollande’s friends say, who have raised the question to figure out how they can hold on for another three years while sustaining such heavy losses in all of the elections organised in the meantime, and having just a 16% popularity rating among the French population. I strongly believe in an early dissolution of the National Assembly. If the results of this early legislative election give the same results as the European election, where the political party of the President of the Republic, which has all the power, the State, the National Assembly, the Senate, the regions, thousands of municipalities, gathered less than 14% of voices, then I don’t see how the President of the Republic can continue like this. In any case, the question arises.

Filed Under: Articles, Interviews Tagged With: EU, Marine Le Pen, robbed

EU to allocate € 950,000 for democracy assistance project in Armenia

June 3, 2014 By administrator

June 3, 2014 – 17:52 AMT

179531The European Union has launched a new democracy assistance project in Armenia in an effort to develop a closer partnership with the country, Tert.am reported.

Introducing the initiative on Wednesday, June 2 Arevik Saribekyan, the British Council’s country director, the project aims to promote closer EU-Armenia ties and contribute to strengthening of democracy and effective governance. Minister of Justice Hovhannes Manukyan and the Head of the EU Delegation to Armenia Traian Hristea announced the official start of the Assistance to Armenia’s Democratic Governance 18-month project, with a total budget of € 949,670.

In his opening speech, Ambassador Hristea said that the EU – which is a key donor in the Armenia’s civil society building efforts – seeks to foster democratic governance, increase objective information exchange and promote a plurality of opinions in the country. He described the civil society as a key driving force seeking to assist in political decision-making processes.

The ambassador noted that the EU Eastern Partners are still facing restrictions in their democracy-building efforts despite their desire meet the above-mentioned targets.

The project, also focusing on media activities, will be more actively implemented in five regions: Tavush, Lori, Gegharkunik, Vayots Dzor and Syunik.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, assistance, democracy, EU

German opposition to Turkey’s EU membership rises: poll

May 28, 2014 By administrator

BERLIN – Reuters

             n_67092_1    Thousands of expatriate Turks attended Turkish PM Erdoğan’s Cologne rally last weekend. REUTERS Photo

A growing majority of Germans are opposed to Turkey entering the European Union, according to a poll published days after Prime Minister Tayyip Erdoğan made a controversial speech to Turks in Cologne.

The survey by Forsa for Stern magazine found 69 percent of Germans oppose Turkey joining the EU, up from 52 percent who   were against it in a 2005 survey. The number in favour of Turkey joining the EU fell to 26 percent from 43 percent in 2005, according to the poll released on Tuesday.

Many EU governments support Turkey’s ambitions to join, arguing that Europe should capitalise on Ankara’s influence in the Middle East. However, German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s ruling conservative party has long been opposed.

Germany has always had doubts about allowing a largely Muslim country of 76 million people into the European club, fearing that cultural differences and its size will make it too difficult to integrate.

Ankara began negotiations to join the EU in 2005, 18 years after applying. But a series of political obstacles, notably over the divided island of Cyprus, and resistance to Turkish membership in Germany and France, have slowed progress.

On Saturday, Erdoğan told a cheering arena of 16,000 diaspora supporters in Germany to integrate but not assimilate in a defiant hour-long speech. Some 45,000 protesters marched against the Turkish premier’s appearance.

Erdoğan has often addressed mass audiences of expatriate Turks when visiting Germany in rousing patriotic affairs with thousands waving the Turkish flag.

Some 3 million people of Turkish origin live in Germany and 1.4 million Turkish citizens can vote, a number equivalent to the electorate of Turkey’s fifth-largest city Adana.

Erdoğan’s handling of protests against his government in the past year and his two-week closure of social networking site Twitter and block on video-sharing platform YouTube this year drew criticism at home and abroad, including from the German government.

Turkey has said it remains determined to continue on the path towards EU accession but government officials from Erdoğan on down have voiced frustration at what they see as unnecessary bureaucratic and political obstacles.

May/28/2014

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: EU, german, Turkey

France’s Le Pen says Turkey’s EU bid should be vetoed

May 27, 2014 By administrator

France’s Marine Le Pen, whose party triumphed in recent European Parliament (EP) elections, has said that the far-right Front 185647_newsdetailNational will stand against Turkey’s European Union accession process and that the country’s membership should be vetoed.

Le Pen’s party, garnering 25 percent, was among the Euroskeptic and far-right parties to make big gains in the EP elections, which will have far-reaching effects on European policy in the coming years.

“As a first step, we want the cancellation of the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership [TTIP] between the US and EU as soon as possible. Secondly, we want the veto of Turkey’s membership [bid] immediately. Our third task is related to French issues,” Le Pen told broadcaster BFM TV on Monday.

The Front National triumphed in elections for the first time in its history, taking as many as 24 seats in the EP, the EU’s only elected institution, which works with the European Commission and 28 governments to debate and pass laws. French Prime Minister Manuel Valls called the breakthrough by the National Front a political earthquake.

According to observers in Europe, the rise of the Euroskeptic party in France will create an unfavorable atmosphere for Turkey’s EU accession negotiations and adversely affect not only Turkey’s EU bid but also the situation of Muslim immigrants in European capitals.

Le Pen is considered an Islamophobe who promotes anti-Islamic policies. However, Islamophobia is not the only item on her party’s agenda; she is also opposed to the euro.

Before the elections, Le Pen said in an interview that she did not have a problem with Turkey, but that the main problem in France was the “visibility” of Islam. She also said she was against Turkey’s EU membership and could not understand why Turkey was seeking to join a union that everyone wanted to get out of, though she allowed that the EU was not acting fairly toward Ankara.

On Monday, Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu, Turkey’s European Union affairs minister, said he does not believe that the victory of Le Pen’s party in France will have a negative impact on Turkey’s EU accession process, adding that France’s stance on Turkey’s membership had changed during the tenure of President François Hollande.

Hollande was elected president in May 2012, defeating his predecessor Nicolas Sarkozy, who remained a steadfast opponent of Turkish membership in the EU during his term in office. Hollande, on the other hand, has softened the French stance, lifting Paris’ objection to the opening of talks on one of the five blocked chapters and thus paving the way for the resumption of the accession talks.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: bid, EU, France's Le Pen, Turkey, vetoed

Big wins for French far right, Britain’s UKIP rock EU elections

May 26, 2014 By administrator

May 26, 2014, Monday/ 10:05:20/ REUTERS / BRUSSELS

Eurosceptic nationalists scored stunning victories in European Parliament elections in France and Britain on Sunday as critics of the European Union more than doubled their seats in a continent-wide protest vote against austerity and unemployment.

French Prime Minister Manuel Valls called the breakthrough by Marine Le Pen’s anti-immigration, anti-euro National Front in one of the EU’s founding nations a political “earthquake”.

Anti-establishment parties of the far right and hard left, their scores amplified by a low turnout, made gains in many countries although in Germany, the EU’s biggest member state with the largest number of seats, and Italy, the pro-European centre ground held firm.

In a vote that raised more doubts about Britain’s long-term future in the EU, Nigel Farage’s UK Independence Party, which advocates immediate withdrawal, led the opposition Labour party and Prime Minister David Cameron’s Conservatives comfortably with almost half the results declared.

A jubilant Le Pen, whose party beat President Francois Hollande’s ruling Socialists into third place, told supporters: “The people have spoken loud and clear … they no longer want to be led by those outside our borders, by EU commissioners and technocrats who are unelected.

“They want to be protected from globalisation and take back the reins of their destiny.”

With 80 percent of votes counted, the National Front had won 26 percent of the vote, comfortably ahead of the conservative opposition UMP on 20.6 percent, with the Socialists on 13.8, their second heavy defeat in two months after losing dozens of town halls in March.

First official results from around the 28-nation bloc showed the pro-European centre-left and centre-right parties will keep control of around 70 percent of the 751-seat EU legislature, but the number of Eurosceptic members will more than double.

The centre-right European People’s Party, led by former Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker, was set to win 212 seats, preliminary results issued by the parliament showed.

“As the EPP has a strong lead … I am ready to accept the mandate of the European Commission president,” Juncker told reporters in parliament. “We will have a clear pro-European majority in this house.”

The centre-left Socialists, led by outgoing European Parliament President Martin Schulz of Germany, were in second place with 186 seats followed by the centrist liberals on 70 and the Greens on 55. Eurosceptic groups were expected to win about 141 seats, according to a Reuters estimate, the far left 43 and conservatives 44.

A glum looking Schulz would not concede defeat, telling reporters he would negotiate with other parties.

“It is a bad day for the European Union when a party with such a racist, xenophobic and anti-Semite programme gets 24-25 percent of the vote in France,” he said. “But these voters aren’t extremists, they have lost trust, they have lost hope.”

UKIP make big gains

The political fallout may be felt more strongly in national politics than at EU level, pulling mainstream conservative parties further to the right and raising pressure to crack down on immigration.

In Britain, where voting took place last Thursday, UKIP won 27.5 percent of the vote, with the Labour opposition on 25.4 percent and the Conservatives on 24 percent, although results from Scotland were still to be factored in.

That will pile pressure on Cameron, who has promised Britons an in/out referendum on EU membership in 2017 if he is re-elected next year, to take an even tougher line in Europe. His pro-European Liberal Democrat coalition partners were set to hold just one seat, a loss of nine seats.

“The whole European project has been a lie,” Farage said on a television link-up with Brussels. “I don’t just want Britain to leave the European Union, I want Europe to leave the European Union.”

In Italy, pro-European Prime Minister Matteo Renzi’s centre-left Democratic Party was on course for a resounding win, building a huge lead over the anti-establishment 5-Star Movement of former comic Beppe Grillo, near complete results showed.

The anti-immigration far right People’s Party topped the poll in Denmark and the extreme-right Jobbik, widely accused of racism and anti-Semitism, finished second in Hungary.

In the Netherlands, the anti-Islam, Eurosceptic Dutch Freedom Party of Geert Wilders – which plans an alliance with Le Pen – underperformed but still finished joint second in terms of seats behind a pro-European centrist opposition party.

Although 388 million Europeans were eligible to vote, fewer than half cast ballots. The turnout was officially 43.1 percent, barely higher than the 2009 nadir of 43 percent, despite efforts to personalise the election with the main political families putting forward a leading candidate, or “Spitzenkandidat”.

In Germany, Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Christian Democrats secured 35.3 percent of the vote, down from a 23-year-high of 41.5 percent in last year’s federal election but still a clear victory. The centre-left Social Democrats, her coalition partners, took 27.3 percent.

185559_newsdetailThe anti-euro Alternative for Germany won seats for the first time with 7 percent, the best result so far for a conservative party created only last year to oppose bailouts and call for weaker states to be ejected from the single currency.

Greek far right gains

In Greece, epicentre of the euro zone’s debt crisis, the radical left anti-austerity Syriza movement of Alexis Tsipras won the vote but failed to deliver a knockout blow to the government of Prime Minister Antonis Samaras.

An official projection gave Syriza 26.7 percent, ahead of Samaras’s conservative New Democracy on 22.8 percent, reflecting popular anger at harsh spending cuts adopted in recent years to meet the terms of Athens’s EU/IMF bailout programme.

“Europeans are celebrating the defeat of the bailout and austerity in the country the European leadership turned into the guinea pig of the crisis,” Tsipras said.

The two parties in the coalition, New Democracy and PASOK, won a combined vote larger than that of Syriza, and political analyst Theodore Couloumbis said the government’s survival was not at stake despite its narrow two-seat majority.

Sunday was the fourth and final day of voting in elections to the European Parliament, which is an equal co-legislator with member states on most EU laws.

Far-right and radical left groups will have roughly a quarter of the seats, enough to gain a much louder voice but probably not to block EU legislation.

Officials said final results and seat allotments would probably be finalised later on Monday.

The record low turnout was in Slovakia, with just 13 percent. The highest was 90 percent in Belgium, where voting is compulsory and there was a general election the same day.

Sweden appeared to have elected the only feminist party member of the EU assembly.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: elections, EU, far right party, France, UKIP

Armenia can combine relationship with EU and participation in Customs Union

May 13, 2014 By administrator

May 13, 2014 | 00:37

YEREVAN. – Armenia can combine the development of close relations with European Union and participation in the Russia-led Customs Union, French President Francois Hollande told the reporters on Monday, Armenian News-NEWS.am reports.

Hollande, who is on state visit in Yerevan, participated in the Armenian-French business forum. The President of France stressed that it is possible to find the model, which will allow Armenia to sign Association Agreement with European Union and at the same time join the Customs Union. However, that model should be developed exclusively for Armenia, Hollande added.

“Armenia can combined the relationship with EU and participation in Russia’s Customs Union. For me, it is not a problem. We need to work on the possibilities,” President Hollande added.

Speaking on the Nagorno Karabakh conflict settlement, Francois Hollande said that it is necessary to make efforts to find a “global” solution of the problem.

“Today, we are celebrating 20 years of ceasefire. 20 years is a very long period. We, OSCE Minsk Group co-chair countries, should work towards a final solution and that is why yesterday I was in Azerbaijan and today I am in Armenia,” President Hollande added.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, Customs Union, EU

Iran ‘Ready’ to Supply Gas to Europe via Armenia

May 8, 2014 By administrator

TEHRAN—“Iran is ready to export gas to Europe through Armenia,” Iranian Deputy Energy Minister Ali Majedi was quoted as saying by the ISNA news agency on Wednesday.

ali-majediSpeaking about the routes of exporting Iranian gas to Europe, the Iranian official said: “There are three gas export routes: one is via Turkey, the second one is via Armenia, Georgia and the Black Sea, and the third route lies via Iraq, Syria and Lebanon”.

Iranian Minister of Industry, Mining and Trade Mohammad Reza Nematzadeh said recently that the demand for natural gas is increasing in Europe, while Iran wants to play an important role in European fuel supplies.

Iran might also find itself in a more favorable position if gas supplies to Europe from Russia come under more restrictions in the face of Russia’s standoff with the West in Ukraine.

“Iran can be a reliable partner for Europe: there are sufficient energy resources for cooperation with European countries and numerous projects exist in this connection,” the Iranian minister said.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, EU, GAS, Iran

Sarkisian called for a new deal between Armenia and the EU

April 28, 2014 By administrator

Friday, Sarkisian shouted the European Union to continue to deepen its relations with Armenia through a new framework for cooperation which would be “compatible” with the arton99382-480x270forthcoming accession to the Customs Union.

“We will take further steps with our EU partners, to create a legal foundation governing our relationship, on the one hand reflect the content of previous discussions between Armenia and the EU, and to the other will be compatible with other formats of cooperation, “Sarkisian said at a gathering of the Eastern Partnership program of the EU, which was held in Prague.

“Our conviction: no partner countries should be forced to pay a price because it decides to participate in one or another integration process. We do not make a choice between our allies we have as many friends as possible, “he said.

Sargsyan clearly alludes to the EU decision to abandon the planned association agreement with Yerevan following his unexpected decision last August. Some EU officials have repeatedly stated that the dominant component of the agreement is not “compatible” with the accession to the economic bloc led by Russia.

European leaders last fall rejected a proposal for an Armenian watered down version of the Association Agreement. Yerevan renewed the offer last month after quee Brussels signed the political segment of a similar agreement with Ukraine in solidarity with the pro-Western interim government in Kiev.

The Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt has excluded such a possibility, on March 23, citing Yerevan acceptance of the legitimacy of a disputed referendum in the Crimea led to the annexation of the region by Russia.

Then, four days later, Armenia voted against a pro-Ukrainian UN resolution. “Our vote at the United Nations has killed any chance of signing an association agreement,” said Alexander Arzumanyan, an opposition MP and former Minister of Foreign Affairs. “We stepped openly anti-European. ”

Another former senior diplomat said anonymously that many in Europe now consider Armenia as a “Russian satellite discredited. “He also said that the EU does not intend to sign a major political agreement with the Sarkisian government.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, EU

EU to postpone meeting with Turkey to prevent further damage to ties

April 3, 2014 By administrator

Emine Kart ANKARA – Hürriyet Daily News

A meeting between Turkey and the EU has been postponed by the 28-member block due to concerns that such a gathering could n_64529_1further strain ties in the wake of concerted criticism from EU officials

A scheduled meeting between senior officials from Turkey and the European Union is due to be postponed by the EU side due to concerns that such a gathering could further strain ties in the wake of concerted criticism from the bloc toward Ankara over the latter’s increased authoritarianism.

The relationship between Ankara and Brussels is becoming increasingly estranged, but the relationship would go from bad to worse if the meeting went ahead as planned, an EU diplomat told the Hürriyet Daily News yesterday.

The meeting of the Turkey-EU Association Committee was originally scheduled to take place next week, said the diplomat, who spoke on condition of anonymity. The committee prepares the agenda of annual Turkey-Association Council meeting.

“Under such an environment which has become tenser than earlier due to bans on Twitter and YouTube, we didn’t want to hold such a meeting. There would be too much bashing of Turkey around,” he said. “After the meeting, both sides would be unhappier than they were before,” he said.

“Those who didn’t want to hold the meeting consist of individuals who may be classified into two camps, with a meaningful nuance between each other: Some of them didn’t want it because they have been upset with Turkey. And the other side didn’t want it because, in addition to being upset with Turkey, they didn’t want to carry on speaking with Turkey either,” the EU diplomat also said.

Turkish diplomatic sources, meanwhile, speaking under condition of customary anonymity, said Turkey and the EU were currently close to an agreement in principle to hold the Turkey-EU Association Council meeting in June.

Regardless of whether there is any tension, the August 2014 presidential elections in Turkey could also make it more difficult to a meeting in June due to the intense political agenda. Furthermore, there is widely held speculation that the next parliamentary elections scheduled for June 2015 could be held earlier, perhaps in conjunction with the presidential vote in August.

“That’s why I keep on saying that at a time like this, it is in everybody’s interest to work harder and to display their political will. The process is there but there is a need for political will and work,” the EU diplomat said. He particularly took pains not to use the word “disconnect” for the near future of Turkey-EU ties.

“Do not forget that the only elections are not in Turkey, but there will also be European Parliament elections, which means that Turkey’s counterparts will shortly become lame ducks,” the EU diplomat said, while calling for urgent action by the Turkish side.

Füle in consultations

EU officials in Brussels, meanwhile, refrained from giving an explicit answer to the Daily News when asked to comment on Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu’s remarks in which he urged EU Enlargement Commissioner Stefan Füle to ask for Turkey’s view before making statements about the ongoing ban on Twitter and YouTube in Turkey.

Following a meeting with Füle in Brussels late April 1 on the sidelines of a foreign minister meeting of NATO, Davutoğlu told reporters that “he conveyed to Füle that having consultations with Turkey would be useful before making these kinds of statements.”

“The EU expects every candidate country to deliver on Copenhagen criteria by making sure new legislative proposals are compatible with European standards and in line with these criteria. The European Commission has repeatedly stated that it stands ready to assist Turkey in this respect and to further deepen is engagement with the EU,” Peter Stano, a spokesperson for Füle, said yesterday in response to a Daily News question.

Nonetheless, sources familiar with the issue told the Daily News that Füle spoke to his inner circle at a morning meeting on April 2 after he saw Davutoğlu’s reported remarks.

“I will hold consultations only with colleague EU commissioners or Ms. Ashton,” Füle reportedly said, referring to the EU high representative for foreign affairs and security policy, Catherine Ashton. At the same meeting, Füle told his inner circle that this was what he told Davutoğlu during their meeting as well, the same sources said.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: EU, Turkey

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