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| Austrian Foreign Minister Ursula Plassnik (R) and European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso attend the joint news conference in Vienna, captial of Austria, May 28, 2006. (Xinhua Photo) | VIENNA, May 27 (Xinhua) -- Member states of the
European Union plan to complete the process for the ratification of the EU
constitution by 2009 at the latest, Foreign Minister of Luxemburg Jean Asselborn
said on Saturday.
Asselborn made the remarks on the
first day of a two-day meeting of EU foreign ministers in Austria's
Klosternneuburg on the future of the EU constitution and the process of the
bloc's enlargement.
Describing the year 2009 as the "deadline," Asselborn
told media that EU countries had the same political will to end the process for
the ratification of the EU constitution by 2009 at the latest.
The foreign ministers of 25 EU countries did not
mention 2010 or 2011 as the "deadline" for the EU constitution, he added.
"No one considers that the 'fundamental treaty' is
already dead. EU will decide whether to reserve the current contents of
Constitution or not," Asselborn added.
At Saturday's meeting, the foreign ministers
reportedly agreed to prolong their yearlong "period of reflection" by another 12
months, after the frustration in the Netherlands and France last year.
According to local media, Germany would stick to the
"political substance" of the current constitution.
The constitution will provide the EU with measures on
policy-making which "we do need," said German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter
Steinmeier at the meeting.
He added that by the middle of 2007, the EU could
decide the further direction of the EU constitution, and Germany would make
efforts toward this end during its EU presidency in the first half of 2007.
A draft EU constitution was rejected last year by
France and the Netherlands. Under EU rules, all 25 member states must ratify the
constitution before it comes into force. Enditem |