ZAGREB, May 3 (Hina) - The chairpersons of the parliamentary foreign policy committees of Croatia, Albania and Macedonia met in Zagreb on Monday to discuss cooperation within the American-Adriatic Charter with the aim of getting the
three countries closer to NATO.
ZAGREB, May 3 (Hina) - The chairpersons of the parliamentary foreign
policy committees of Croatia, Albania and Macedonia met in Zagreb on
Monday to discuss cooperation within the American-Adriatic Charter
with the aim of getting the three countries closer to NATO.#L#
"We will step up our joint efforts through parliamentary cooperation
to get a clear signal for our countries at a NATO summit in Istanbul
this June, but on the basis of individual achievement," the chairman
of the Croatian Parliament's Foreign Policy Committee, Neven Jurica,
told a press conference after meeting his counterparts from Albania
and Macedonia, Ilir Zela and Teuta Arifi.
The meeting was also attended by Ralph Frank, the Ambassador of the
United States, which co-signed the Charter in Tirana one year ago,
Croatian Foreign Minister Miomir Zuzul and Croatian Parliament
Vice-President Luka Bebic.
All three committee chairpersons said that the main purpose of this
kind of cooperation was to achieve the objectives set out in the
American-Adriatic Charter and the strategic goal of all three
countries -- admission to NATO.
"Integration is possible if our countries work hard and cooperate. We
expect to receive a positive response and a clear signal in Istanbul
with regard to our integration with NATO," the chairwoman of the
Macedonian Parliament's Foreign Policy Committee, Teuta Arifi, said.
The chairman of the Albanian Parliament's Foreign Policy Committee,
Ilir Zela, said he was glad to see that Croatia was well advanced in
Euro-Atlantic integration processes and congratulated the Croatian
officials on the positive opinion of the European Commission on
Croatia's EU membership application.
"We also expect promotion of cooperation in other areas such as
security and the fight against organised crime in order to consolidate
the democratic systems in our countries," Zela said.
(Hina) vm