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SLOVENE PRESS SLAMS CROATIAN PLANS ABOUT ECONOMIC ZONE AT SEA

LJUBLJANA, Aug 5 (Hina) - The announcement of Croatia's plans to declare an economic belt in the Adriatic sea was coldly greeted in Slovenia. Slovenia's foreign ministry on Monday described such a Croatian move as "unilateral intervention into agreed solutions prior to the final demarcation of the sea border", while the press on Tuesday cautioned that such a decision of Zagreb could be harmful for Slovenia's interests.
LJUBLJANA, Aug 5 (Hina) - The announcement of Croatia's plans to declare an economic belt in the Adriatic sea was coldly greeted in Slovenia. Slovenia's foreign ministry on Monday described such a Croatian move as "unilateral intervention into agreed solutions prior to the final demarcation of the sea border", while the press on Tuesday cautioned that such a decision of Zagreb could be harmful for Slovenia's interests. #L# The leading daily Delo said a possible bilateral agreement between Italy and Croatia on the widening of the economic zone in the Adriatic would be harmful for third countries. "If Croatia and Italy proclaim an Exclusive Economic Zone to the middle of the Adriatic sea, and carry out the demarcation of epicontinental belts, there would be no more international waters. A question poses itself what would happen to Slovenia's request for direct access to the international waters. In that case, the nearest international waters would off Albania's and Montenegro's shores instead at the well-known T5 position off Umag. In light of the fact that in the international waters Croatia has not yet defined borders with Slovenia and consequently with Italy in the northern Adriatic, Zagreb's decision is particularly strange," according to an article which Delo ran in Tuesday's issue. Delo speculates that Italy might accept Croatia's suggestion for the widening of the EEZ only if it "were given special concessions from Croatia". In addition to this problem, Croatia has not defined its borders at with Slovenia and Montenegro, and therefore, for Delo, Zagreb's idea is more problematic and delicate. Another daily, called Dnevnik, wrote that Ljubljana warned Zagreb that "within its common foreign policy, the European Union is not inclined to see the set-up of new economic zones on its territory, and Croatia, being on the road towards the EU, will have to respect that suggestion". The daily added that Slovenia would oppose its neighbour's plans to declare the economic zone. (hina) ms sb

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