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Merkel To Visit Serbia On Farewell Trip To Balkans


RFE/RL

3 minutes

  _____  

German Chancellor Angela Merkel is set to travel to Belgrade on September 13
to discuss political and economic cooperation and the EU integration process
with Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic, as her long-lasting mandate as head
of government comes to an end.

The next day, Merkel will head to neighboring Albania, where a meeting is
planned with the prime ministers of Serbia and the six other Western Balkan
states that are not members of the EU -- Albania, Bosnia-Herzegovina,
Kosovo, Montenegro, and North Macedonia.

German government spokeswoman Martina Fietz has said that "in addition to
the bilateral talks, regional cooperation will be an important topic" of the
two-day trip, including plans to create a common regional market.

After 16 years at the height of European politics, Merkel will retire at the
end of her fourth term as chancellor following German elections on September
26.

Her Balkan visit also comes ahead of the next EU-Balkans summit in October.

During a meeting with Vucic last week, the German ambassador to Belgrade,
Thomas Schieb, said that Merkel's Balkan visit is sending a strong signal
that Serbia and the region remain high on Berlin's agenda.

Vucic called Merkel's trip "a great honor for Serbia, and a chance to thank
her for everything she had done for Serbia and the region during her long
and successful term in office."

The launch of the so-called Berlin Process by Merkel in 2014 to promote
regional cooperation in the Western Balkans and European integration
"created a different atmosphere and new opportunities for cooperation in the
Western Balkans, making the region more peaceful and stable," the Serbian
president said.

The Western Balkan countries are at different stages of integrating with the
EU.

Montenegro and Serbia are the most advanced, having opened accession
negotiations and chapters.

Albania and North Macedonia are awaiting the official opening of accession
talks, while Bosnia and Kosovo are potential candidate countries.

Following a virtual conference with the leaders of the Western Balkan
countries on July 5, Merkel said she saw the six Western Balkan states as
future EU member states for "geostrategic reasons."

"It is in the European Union's own interests to advance the process forward
here," Merkel told reporters.

She did not name Russia and China but hinted at their influence in the
region.


With reporting by dpa, Euractiv, and Balkan Insight


 

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