'Serious' corruption sparks EU rift
By George Parker and Sarah Laitner in Brussels and Kerin Hope and in Athens

Published: April 26 2007 23:14 | Last updated: April 26 2007 23:14

Britain and France have joined forces to demand that Brussels gets
tough on ­Bulgaria and Romania over "serious" corruption, amid claims
that the European Union's two newest members are being let off the
hook.

Sweden and the Netherlands also voiced fears that the European
Commission is not taking seriously its promise to maintain pressure on
the two states to complete promised legal reforms, undermining the
credibility of the EU's enlargement process.


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The formal complaint, made at a private meeting this month, saw member
states allege that Franco Frattini, the EU justice commissioner, had
grown too close to the two countries he is monitoring. Mr Frattini's
decision to go skiing in February with Rumen Petkov, Bulgaria's
interior minister, caused consternation in some national capitals and
among some colleagues in Brussels.

The Italian commissioner's spokesman said the skiing took place during
a working weekend in the Bulgarian mountains and he refuted "in the
strongest possible terms" any suggestions of a conflict of interest.

However, EU ambassadors claimed Mr Frattini's public assessments of
progress in Bulgaria in particular did not reflect what one diplomat
called a "very, very serious" situation.

"The credibility of the enlargement process is at stake because if we
can't handle this properly the conclusion will be that we cannot take
in countries like this in future," the diplomat said.

Bulgaria and Romania joined the EU on January 1, but were told to step
up work urgently to meet the bloc's standards in the justice field,
including fighting high-level corruption and organised crime. The
Commission set up a monitoring regime, with the threat of penalties if
good progress had not been made, including non-recognition of court
judgments in the two countries and potential suspension of EU
subsidies.

Several EU member states claim Commission officials have been told
privately to not be too critical of the two countries, even though
Bulgaria has a non-existent record for convictions for high-level
corruption. The ambassadors of Britain, France, the Netherlands and
Sweden demanded a meeting with Catherine Day, the Commission's top
civil servant, to insist her office got a grip on the situation and
ensure that a progress report in June was rigorous.

The Commission said Ms Day's secretariat-general was overseeing the
work and that expert missions had been undertaken recently in Bulgaria
and Romania.

France and the Netherlands are sceptical about enlargement, but
Britain and Sweden want to ensure the Bulgarian experience does not
tarnish efforts to further extend EU borders.

Mr Frattini's spokesman said it was normal for Ms Day's team to
co-ordinate the work. The commissioner had been "consistent and
coherent", welcoming re-forms where they were carried out, encouraging
the countries to improve for their own sake and insisting reforms
yielded concrete results, he said.

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2007

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