After both candidates overcome Hungary’s two-year veto and began the first cluster of negotiations, the European Union has set the stage for decoupling Moldova’s accession process from Ukraine’s.
The president of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, stated: “Once the first cluster is open, each candidate country is responsible for itself because they have to deliver different reforms depending on which candidate country we’re talking about.” “I’m just talking about Moldova here,” she said.
António Costa, the president of the European Council, stood beside her, applauding the Moldovan government for approving reforms “very fast” and predicting that the candidate could “rapidly” unlock the other five clusters if the pace continued.
The most significant geopolitical investment is enlargement, according to Costa. The 33 chapters that make up Accession are divided into six thematic categories.
Although Moldova and Ukraine are thought to be theoretically prepared to expose the entire cluster, they have only opened the first one, dubbed “Fundamentals” because it addresses the judiciary, human rights, anti-corruption, and the rule of law. A candidate nation deserves to proceed when it performs as well as Moldova. Merit-based procedures don’t have to be slow. It denotes equity. The fairness is that we must deliver if you do. I’m not concerned about the procedure as of now.
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