"The public does not know what is really stated in that document, and the government has neither commented on nor informed the parliament of it," DC leader Vesna Skare Ozbolt said at a news conference on Monday.
Skare Ozbolt said that failure to comment on a number of objections from the report regarding judicial reform, the fight against corruption and organised crime, and the growing influence of the government on the public media proves that the government lacked a clear strategy of EU entry, even though it was emphasising that this issue was one of its priorities.
The government must state clearly what we are offering to the EU, what we will produce and sell, and how the economy sector is preparing for admission, the DC leader said.
She added that as much as 65 percent of domestic manufacturers did not have a single client in the EU and that the EU objected, among other things, to a high unemployment rate and insufficient transparency regarding public debt figures.