Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić would agree to Serbia’s membership in the EU even if it were not full membership. More important to him, he says, are market access and the flow of people.
For Serbia, membership in the European Union without the right of veto is acceptable, President Aleksandar Vučić told the German Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, as reported by Vreme.
“The most important aspect for us is the internal market as well as the free flow of goods, people, and capital,” Vučić told this newspaper. “Those are the central values we want to achieve through EU membership.”
The German newspaper points out that Vučić – by agreeing to membership without the right of veto – has joined Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama, who said the same.
For some time now, the possibility of such “on hold” membership has been mentioned from within the European Union, in which new members would not be full members for years or would even be under monitoring.
Some circles in Germany – and evidently in the Balkans – believe that this is the only way a real chance opens up for the EU to expand in the near future.
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Source: Nova.rs; Photo: ATA Images



