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MNeagle
29th June 2013, 05:42 PM
may be a good thing you didn't return General... time will tell.


Mired in recession, ex-Yugoslav Croatia joins troubled EU

Reuters) - Croatia becomes the 28th member of the European Union at midnight on Sunday, a milestone that caps the Adriatic republic's recovery from war but is tinged with anxiety over the state of the economy (http://www.reuters.com/finance/economy?lc=int_mb_1001) and the bloc it joins.
EU flags fluttered from a stage in Zagreb's central square ahead of the evening's festivities, though there have been few signs of the gushing welcome that marked past expansions to ex-communist Eastern Europe.

Croatia joins the bloc just over two decades after declaring independence from federal Yugoslavia, the trigger for four years of war in which some 20,000 people died.

But, facing a fifth year of recession and record unemployment of 21 percent, few Croatians are in the mood to party.

They join a bloc deeply troubled by its own economic woes, which have created internal divisions and undermined public support for the union.

"Just look what's happening in Greece (http://www.reuters.com/places/greece) and Spain! Is this where we're headed?" asked pensioner Pavao Brkanovic. "You need illusions to be joyful, but the illusions have long gone," he said at a Zagreb market.

The country of 4.4 million people, blessed with a coastline that attracts 10 million tourists each year, is one of seven that emerged from the ashes of Yugoslavia during a decade of war in the 1990s.

Slovenia was first to join the EU, in 2004, but Serbia, Bosnia, Macedonia, Montenegro and Kosovo are still years away.

Some in Croatia have drawn comparisons between Sunday night's celebrations in Zagreb and the Eurovision Song Contest that the city hosted in 1990, when Yugoslavia was on the brink of collapse just as Europe was poised to unite with the fall of the Berlin Wall.

Italy's Toto Cutugno won with the refrain "Unite, unite Europe", but instead Yugoslavia fell apart and Croatia went to war with Serb rebels who tried to break away from the newly-independent state with the backing of Belgrade.

MERKEL NO-SHOW

"Back then, it looked to me as if everything should be resolved in a fortnight and we would quickly jump in (to the EU)," Croatian Prime Minister Zoran Milanovic told the European Parliament this week.

"But then the war happened, and it didn't come to pass until today."

To get to this point, Croatia has gone through seven years of tortuous and often unpopular EU-guided reform.

It has handed over more than a dozen Croatian and Bosnian Croat military and political leaders charged with war crimes by the United Nations (http://www.reuters.com/subjects/united-nations?lc=int_mb_1001) tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in The Hague.

It has sold shipyards, steeped in history and tradition but deeply indebted, and launched a high-profile fight against corruption that saw former prime minister Ivo Sanader jailed.

Some EU capitals remain concerned at the level of graft and organized crime. Croatia will not yet join the 17-nation single currency zone, nor the visa-free Schengen zone.

The spirit of the occasion took another knock when German Chancellor Angela Merkel, the bloc's most powerful leader, pulled out of the accession ceremony, saying she was too busy.

Croatian media linked the move to a row over a former Croatian secret service operative wanted in Germany (http://www.reuters.com/places/germany), though a spokesman for Merkel denied this.

The chancellor, instead, urged Croatia to press on with reforms.

"There are many more steps to take, especially in the area of legal security and fighting corruption," Merkel said in a weekly podcast.

Despite the mood, however, for some Croatians the merits of accession are undeniable.

"The EU is not perfect but it is Croatia's only option," said popular novelist Slavenka Drakulic Ilic.

"We need it for financial and economic reasons," she told the T-portal website on Friday, "and we need it for the sake of peace and stability. We belong to a region that is still volatile."

(Additional reporting by Annika Breidthardt in Berlin; Editing by Matt Robinson and Kevin Liffey)


http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/06/29/us-croatia-eu-idUSBRE95S0FT20130629?feedType=RSS&feedName=topNews&utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter&dlvrit=992637

General of Darkness
29th June 2013, 06:35 PM
Yup, stupid ex-commies running the country into the hands of the zionist bankers.

General of Darkness
30th June 2013, 07:30 AM
How shit.

Croatia Outlaws Hate Crime, Enabling it to become EU Member (http://www.jewishpress.com/news/breaking-news/croatia-outlaws-hate-crime-enabling-it-to-become-eu-member/2013/06/30/) By: Jewish Press News Briefs (http://www.jewishpress.com/author/newsbriefs/)

Published: June 30th, 2013




http://www.jewishpress.com/wp-content/themes/jewishpress/images/printer.png print (http://www.jewishpress.com/news/breaking-news/croatia-outlaws-hate-crime-enabling-it-to-become-eu-member/2013/06/30/?print)


http://www.jewishpress.com/wp-content/themes/jewishpress/images/comments.png tell a friend



Croatia has outlawed hate crime, enabling it to become the 18th member of the European Union, the European Jewish Press reported.

The new law in Croatia promises “to protect those who may still be subjected to threats or acts of discrimination, hostility or violence,” makes it a crime to violate “public peace and order based on racial, ethnic, religious and other grounds.”


The pre-Holocaust Jewish community of Croatia numbered approximately 24,000 before a pro-Nazi government in 1941 began persecuting Jews, eventually deporting and exterminating approximately 78 percent of the Jewish community. After the war, almost half of the 2,500 remaining Jews in Croatia moved to Israel after 1948.


Croatian President Ivo Josipovic earlier this year made a public apology to his country’s Holocaust victims in an address to the Knesset on an official visit to the Jewish State. “We need to look into our hearts, and to come to terms with the darkest stain in our history,” he said. “We must look in our hearts, at the darkest stain in our history. We must know: The snake is weak, but it is still there.”

madfranks
30th June 2013, 09:13 AM
The EU isn't exactly a bastion of security and solidarity, so why would Croatia join right now? It's like abandoning your little sinking ship to get on the Titanic.

Horn
30th June 2013, 09:26 AM
The EU isn't exactly a bastion of security and solidarity, so why would Croatia join right now? It's like abandoning your little sinking ship to get on the Titanic.

Yes, guess they figured they'd go over there and help the process along.

General of Darkness
30th June 2013, 09:30 AM
The EU isn't exactly a bastion of security and solidarity, so why would Croatia join right now? It's like abandoning your little sinking ship to get on the Titanic.

MFer, corruption, plain and simple. Like every country on the planet, but more importantly the people voted for this POS. Just look at his history. In 1980 Ivo Josipović became a member of the League of Communists of Croatia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/League_of_Communists_of_Croatia). He played a key role in the democratic transformation of this party as the author of the first statute of the Social Democratic Party of Croatia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_Democratic_Party_of_Croatia) (SDP). In 1994, he left politics and the SDP, dedicating himself to law and music.

Just knowing that, a sane person would run in the opposite direction.

General of Darkness
30th June 2013, 09:33 AM
Posted before, but in humor you can find truth.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vnuAh3esdpE