OHRID: FOREIGN MINISTER SAYS CROATIA WANTS SAFE ENVIRONMENT OHRID, Sept 27 (Hina) - Croatia is reinforcing bilateral cooperation with Macedonia and Albania since it wishes to live in a safe environment which will be ruled by the
spirit of cooperation, economic progress and mutual respect, Croatian Foreign Minister Tonino Picula said in Macedonia's Ohrid on Saturday.
OHRID, Sept 27 (Hina) - Croatia is reinforcing bilateral
cooperation with Macedonia and Albania since it wishes to live in a
safe environment which will be ruled by the spirit of cooperation,
economic progress and mutual respect, Croatian Foreign Minister
Tonino Picula said in Macedonia's Ohrid on Saturday. #L#
Croatia's strategic goals are membership in the European Union and
NATO as well as regional cooperation with all democracies, Picula
said at a conference on the Adriatic Charter, adding that these
goals were based on the strengthening of democratic values and
their implementation.
Picula said Croatia was willing to share with countries in the
region the experience it had gained in the Euro-Atlantic
integration process.
Commenting on the many regional initiatives, Picula said
"different countries use them for different purposes" and that
"Croatia has always felt that an excessive number of initiatives
should not become a replacement for their usefulness".
The Adriatic Charter, as one of said initiatives, was signed with
the United States in Tirana on May 2 and should help Croatia,
Macedonia, and Albania implement reforms required for joining the
EU and especially NATO as fast as possible.
In her opening address at the conference, Macedonian Foreign
Minister Ilinka Mitreva said the doors to the Adriatic Charter were
open for Serbia-Montenegro and Bosnia-Herzegovina.
Bruce Jackson, a U.S. Republican lobbyist and creator of the Baltic
and Adriatic Charters, said the expansion of the latter depended on
the three participating countries' chiefs of diplomacy, but added
that the U.S. did not object to two more countries joining.
Asked by Hina how he would respond to the invitation, Serbia-
Montenegro Foreign Minister Goran Svilanovic smiled and said he had
invited himself.
Replying to the same question, Picula said "surplus cooperation
can't be harmful but one must see to it that regional cooperation
doesn't become a substitute for the efforts we are making at home".
"We have to resolve some problems by ourselves, and some jointly,"
he said at the end of the Ohrid event.
(hina) ha