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| Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude
Juncker casts his vote during a referendum on the European Union
constitution at the Capellen Cultural Center in Luxembourg July 10,
2005. (Xinhua/AFP photo) |
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| A voter casts his ballot during the EU
constitution referendum in Luxembourg. (Xinhua/AFP
photo) |
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(Xinhua photo) |
LUXEMBOURG, July 10 (Xinhuanet) -- Citizens of Luxembourg went to
the polls starting Sunday morning to vote on the European Union (EU)
constitution treaty.
The referendum in the Grand Duchy will be the first
since EU leaders announced a "period of reflection" on the constitution at their
June 16-17 summit. A number of EU member countries have postponed their
ratification plans and threw the future of the charter into serious doubt.
The polling stations opened at 8:00 a.m. local time
(0600 GMT) Sunday here and the preliminary results of the referendum are
expected to be revealed soon after the voting ends in the afternoon.
Support for a "yes" vote keeps slumping in recent
months, especially since French and Dutch voters rejected the constitutionin
referendums a month ago.
The last opinion poll in mid-June showed that the
public support for a "no" vote has risen to 45 percent, from 24 percent in
October, while backing for a "yes" fell from 72 percent to 55 percent.
Like the Netherlands, the Luxembourg popular vote is
only consultative, but the parliament has promised to respect the wishes of the
electorate.
Speaking Friday night at a final campaign meeting,
Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker admitted the vote would be close.
"I cannot say that I am confident. I remain concerned
about theLuxembourg people's willingness to say 'yes'," he said, adding "Ifthey
say 'no', then the constitution will be buried. But I hope that we can revive
it."
The Europe's longest-serving head of government has
vowed to step down if the country votes against the constitution.
A total of 12 countries within the EU have so far
ratified the constitution, and only one by popular vote with all the others
endorsing the treaty through national parliaments.
The treaty, designed to make the expanded bloc more
effective in decision-making, among other EU treaties, has to be ratified byall
25 members for it to come legally into force. Enditem |