euronews.com<https://www.euronews.com/2026/03/11/serbia-and-albania-issue-joint-text-on-eu-accession-without-veto>
Serbia and Albania issue joint text on EU accession without veto
Zara Riffler
4–5 minutes
________________________________

In a joint op-ed published in German newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 
(FAZ), Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić and Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama 
called for an accelerated integration process of Serbia and Albania into the EU.

They described their idea as a "realistic path to the EU", with functional 
partial integration serving as an intermediate step to revive the EU 
enlargement process and increase stability in the region.

Their joint proposal entails gradual integration into the EU’s internal market 
and the Schengen area, but without EU Commissioners from their countries, 
members of the European Parliament and the right of veto.

A full EU member state enjoys all of the above rights.

The EU accession process for Serbia and other Western Balkan countries has 
stalled for years, as candidate countries have not made sufficient progress on 
rule of law, anti-corruption measures, media freedom and judicial reforms 
required for EU membership.

Western Balkans 'a new frontline for investment in EU's stength'

"In our part of Europe, the Western Balkans - a region geographically 
surrounded by the EU and historically linked to Europe's destiny - the prospect 
of membership remains the strongest driver for reform, investment and 
reconciliation," the leaders of Serbia and Albania wrote in the article.

Addressing the EU, they said: "It is high time that the EU recognises that the 
Western Balkans represent a new frontline for investment in the EU's strength". 
Together, candidate countries would now seek a "realistic path" to full 
membership, they said.

Accelerated integration of the prepared candidate countries into the single 
market and Schengen area could "strengthen the EU's economic and political 
position", they argued, "without burdening the EU's decision-making 
architecture".

Serbia and Albania stated intent to reform last November

In November 2025, Euronews 
welcomed<https://www.euronews.com/my-europe/2025/11/04/zelenskyy-sandu-vucic-to-defend-their-accession-bids-as-brussels-unveils-annual-enlargemen>
 the heads of state and government of Albania, Moldova, Montenegro, North 
Macedonia, Serbia and Ukraine as well as the President of the European Council 
and the EU Enlargement Commissioner to the Euronews Enlargement Summit.

The event coincided with the publication of the European Commission’s annual 
enlargement report. In the report, the Commission highlighted Belgrade’s lack 
of alignment when it comes EU sanctions against Moscow.

At the summit, Serbia’s President Aleksandar Vučić defended his country’s 
commitment to reform. "I will not justify myself for having spoken to anyone," 
Vučić told Euronews, referring to his relationship with Russian President 
Vladimir Putin.

Vučić sidestepped a question about protests in his country and instead 
emphasised the country’s strong economic performance. According to him, 
Serbia’s national debt has declined.

Serbia first applied for EU membership since 2009, but negotiations have since 
stalled. In addition to concerns over media freedom, electoral law reform and 
civil society, Belgrade’s foreign policy has been a source of concern for EU 
leaders.

Albania also emphasised at the Euronews Summit that it aims to become a full 
member of the EU by 2030 at the latest. "2030 is not a dream date, but a 
deadline based on a simple calculation," Rama said in his speech. He added that 
he expects negotiations to be finalised within the next two years.

Together with Montenegro, Albania is considered one of the most promising 
candidates for EU accession. Tackling corruption, however, is one of Albania's 
biggest challenges if it is to become an EU member.

"We accept support, partnership and help, but we don't take lessons from anyone 
in the fight against corruption," said Rama at the event in November. Since 
applying for EU membership, Albania has introduced instruments to combat 
corruption, such as the establishment of the "anti-corruption authority SPAK".

-- 
http:www.antic.org
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"SERBIAN NEWS NETWORK" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/senet/PH0PR13MB5446F8ED242C41DEDAD0B0F7AE44A%40PH0PR13MB5446.namprd13.prod.outlook.com.

Reply via email to