This open letter is part of ESI's Schengen White List Project
We welcome the recent European Commission proposal on visa liberalisation in the Western Balkans. It is an important step forward in a process that will allow people from the Western Balkans, like other Europeans, to travel freely around Europe.
We appreciate the fact that the visa liberalisation process is based on objective benchmarks. Governments in the region have a duty to implement wide-ranging reforms to enhance the EU's security and allay the concerns of EU citizens. The countries of the Western Balkans have been asked to improve control of their borders, introduce forgery-proof biometric passports, and put in place concrete strategies to combat organised crime, corruption and illegal migration.
Now the European Commission has found that three countries - Macedonia, Serbia and Montenegro - have largely met these conditions. We are glad that the European Commission is in a position to propose visa-free travel for them. This shows that the process works.
We also hope that the authorities in Albania and Bosnia-Herzegovina will soon fulfil the remaining criteria and gain visa-free access to the Schengen zone before the end of 2010. We welcome the fact that the European Commission is specifying in detail which conditions still have to be met by both countries, ensuring a rigorous and transparent procedure.
However, we are disturbed by the fact that Kosovo has been left out of this process, a blanket visa requirement having been proposed for all of its residents, including those with Serbian citizenship - this, without any mention of a process that could possibly lead to this requirement being lifted.
We know that EU member states currently disagree on the question of Kosovo's independence. However, all member states should agree that leaving Kosovo residents of all ethnicities trapped in a visa ghetto would be a serious problem - not only for Kosovo, but also for the entire Western Balkans and the EU' s interests in the region.
We are convinced that it is in the EU's interest to encourage the same reforms in Kosovo as have already taken place in Macedonia and Montenegro. To do this, the EU should use the considerable human and financial resources it already deploys in Kosovo.
Bearing this in mind, we call on all EU member states - whatever their view on the status of Kosovo - to consider two changes to the Commission proposal.
First, Kosovo should also receive a visa roadmap. It must be given the opportunity to implement the same far-reaching reforms that the other five Balkan countries have set out to implement and to thus contribute to its own security, as well as to that of the entire region and the whole EU. Once Kosovo meets these conditions, the visa requirement should be abolished.
If Kosovo can be placed on the visa "black list" without an EU consensus on its status, then it can also be placed on the "white list" once it meets the necessary technical requirements. The visa liberalisation process should be considered status neutral by the EU.
Second, there should be no discrimination against Kosovo residents. In line with the Commission's proposal, the 3.5 million Serbs living outside Serbia, including the Serbs of Bosnia, will be eligible to receive Serbian passports allowing visa-free travel within the EU. The residents of Kosovo, meanwhile, will not. We disagree with such thinking. It will have the unintended consequence of encouraging Kosovo Serbs (and Kosovo Bosniaks) to relocate and take up residence outside of Kosovo - in plain contradiction to the EU's stated objective of a multiethnic Kosovo.
For years, the countries of the Western Balkans have been waiting for visa-free travel. In the region's relationship with the EU, few issues have been as important. The EU has been on target with its policy of roadmap conditionality and strict but fair evaluations. In the interests of European - and Balkan - security, it must build on this success.
Signed:
Giuliano Amato, chairman of the Schengen White List Project Advisory Board, former Italian prime minister and interior minister
Otto Schily, former interior minister of Germany, member of the German Bundestag
Radmila Sekerinska, chairperson of the National Council for European Integration of Macedonia, former deputy prime minister of Macedonia
Misha Glenny, author of "McMafia: Crime without Frontiers" and several books on the Balkans
Ivan Krastev, chairman of the Centre for Liberal Strategies, Sofia
Jordi Vaquer, director of the Centre for International Relations and Development Studies (CIDOB), Barcelona
Gerald Knaus, chairman of the European Stability Initiative (ESI), Istanbul
Mark Leonard, executive director of the European Council on Foreign Relations
ESI is grateful to the Robert Bosch Stiftung for supporting the Schengen White List Project - www.esiweb.org/whitelistproject
This latest edition of “China Analysis” looks at the response to the Copenhagen conference within China itself, as it faces the worst environment position imaginable, threatening its systems and interests.
China is now a huge foreign policy challenge to the EU: it must respond with a global China policy.
Risk of instability in the Western Balkans: the EU can no longer 'wait-and-see'.
The Yanukovych Paradox: How Ukraine’s new president can be good news for Europe after all.
The latest issue of China Analysis looks at Beijing’s willingness to strengthen international economic governance, and its authors argue that much thinking in China seems to focus on the short term
The authors of the latest issue of China Analysis argue that Western concerns over “Chindia” - the emergence of a Sino-Indian economic power bloc or strategic alliance - may be unwarranted.
Europe has the US president it wished for, but does Barack Obama have the strong transatlantic partner he wants?
Have broken promises and treating Afghanistan, DR Congo and Iraq like Bosnia left the EU without the capacity to prevent fragile states from becoming failing states?
ECFR publishes a collection of views from key Russian intellectuals.
The EU’s ongoing loss of influence at the UN is putting lives at risk, argues the author of ECFR’s latest paper.
Thomas Klau on France's pension protests.
Jose Ignacio Torreblanca on the significance of ETA's call for a cease-fire.
Thomas Klau on Germany’s linchpin role in the eurozone governance debate.
Comments
There are no comments for this entry yet. Get the discussion started and post below.