Germany, France announce Mediterranean Union 'compromise'
German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy said
last 3th March they reached a "compromise" on Sarkozy's proposal for a
Mediterranean Union, about which Berlin had expressed misgivings. They
settled their differences over the proposed Mediterranean Union. The new
body, to cultivate closer relations across the sea, would go ahead as a
project of the whole 27-nation European Union (EU), the two leaders decided
over dinner at a government mansion in Hanover, Germany.
"We reached a compromise regarding the Mediterranean Union that we both want
and that excludes no one," Sarkozy told a news conference following talks
with Merkel in Hanover, Germany.
"We are in agreement about the Mediterranean Union," Merkel said.
Officials said the two leaders would propose at an EU summit next week that
the Mediterranean Union be adopted as an extension of an existing EU
diplomatic initiative known as the Barcelona Process.
Merkel and Sarkozy also agreed to jointly propose EU plans to fight tax
havens and to set up a working party to draft proposals on the automobile
industry and preventing climate change.
Sarkozy reportedly aims to unveil his Mediterranean grouping at an EU
summit on July 13-14 in Paris.
The arrangement it would effectively replace, the Barcelona Process
involving 12 non-EU Mediterranean nations, has had a lacklustre
history.
Contact information | n/a |
---|---|
News type | Inbrief |
File link |
http://www.eubusiness.com/news-eu/1204579021.48/ |
Source of information | Earth Times |
Keyword(s) | Mediterranean-Union |
Subject(s) | POLICY-WATER POLICY AND WATER MANAGEMENT |
Relation | http://www.emwis.net/initiatives/mediterranean-union |
Geographical coverage | Germany, France |
News date | 04/03/2008 |
Working language(s) | ENGLISH |