LONDON, Sept 29 (Hina) - Croatia is resolved to join the European Union, and its achievements in the fields of home and foreign affairs prove this determination, Croatian Premier Ivica Racan said in London on Monday evening.
LONDON, Sept 29 (Hina) - Croatia is resolved to join the European
Union, and its achievements in the fields of home and foreign
affairs prove this determination, Croatian Premier Ivica Racan
said in London on Monday evening. #L#
Racan, who was on a working visit to Great Britain, held a speech on
the topic 'Croatia on the Threshold to EU Membership', in Shatham
House, a leading British foreign affairs forum.
The Croatian premier emphasised his country's determination to
join the EU, adding that Zagreb proved this by implementing
reforms, fulfilling the given political criteria, strengthening
regional cooperation and enabling refugees to return.
According to Racan, Zagreb's objective is to meet the remaining
conditions for the admission into the Union by 2007.
Speaking about Croatia's cooperation with the Hague-based UN war
crimes tribunal, he said the Croatian judiciary was processing war
crimes, and described this cooperation as an important factor for
the normalisation of relations in the region and the establishment
of just and lasting peace.
In this context, Racan said the efforts were being invested in order
to solve the remaining unsettled issues.
Asked by a BBC reporter how he would convince British Premier Tony
Blair in that cooperation in light of the unsolved issue of fugitive
Croatian General Ante Gotovina, Racan said Croatia could not arrest
somebody who was not in Croatia.
"Our authorities will perhaps be criticised or punished, and then
we shall encounter authorities that will have no democratic
position that an act of justice should be performed," Racan said.
Croatian Premier, who last week announced parliamentary elections
for late November, said the change of those in power might halt
democratic processes in the region.
Racan will meet his host, British Premier Blair, on the margins of a
convention of the Labour Party in Bournemouth, set for Tuesday.
(hina) ms