BRUSSELS, March 14 (Xinhua) -- A European Union
summit approved here on Friday the principle of a Union for the Mediterranean,
proposed by France, to strengthen and further the Barcelona Process.
The plan will involve "all member states of the EU
and the non-EU Mediterranean coastal states," said a statement from the two-day
spring summit that just ended.
The statement said that the European Council asked
the executive commission to present it the necessary proposals for defining the
modalities of what will be called "Barcelona Process: Union for the
Mediterranean" with a view to the summit which will take place in Paris on July
13.
The establishment of such a union "enjoyed support in
the council," Slovenian Prime Minister Janez Jansa, whose country is holding the
current EU presidency, told a joint press conference after the first day session
of the spring EU summit.
"Today we recognized the need to upgrade the
Barcelona Process," he said at the press conference, in which European
Commission President Jose Manual Barroso also attended.
"When the Barcelona Process was launched, it was a
quite a different time," he said, "But now things have changed, we need to
adapt."
He stressed that the Mediterranean Union was not to
replace the Barcelona Process but to upgrade it, noting the process had produced
results over the years after it was started a dozen of years ago.
The Barcelona Process was launched in 1995 to foster
dialogue between EU member states and countries on the southern and eastern
shores of the Mediterranean, including the Arab states (among them the
Palestinian National Authority, but not Libya), Israel, Cyprus, and Turkey. The
main aim of the process was to promote democratization, security and economic
growth in the countries to Europe's south and east.
The prime minister noted that all EU member states
would be involved in the process and work would begin in relevant departments
within the EU to see if what should be added to the process.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy proposed in his last
year's election campaign to establish the Mediterranean Union stretching from
Morocco to Turkey.
Germany rejected Sarkozy's original version of the
plan, which was only to involve certain EU member states but be funded by EU
money.
The agreement came at the summit meeting after
Germany shifted side to stand by France.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Sarkozy agreed on
a compromise last week during a meeting in Hanover that all EU member states be
involved in the plan.
"We are in favor of further developing the Barcelona
process" because it was slowing down and must be reactivated, Merkel told
reporters before the summit.
Under Sarkozy's plan, the union would have one
secretariat, a joint north-south presidency, and periodical summit meetings.
The specific details of the plan are to be hammered
out before a summit on July 13 in Paris under the French EU presidency to
formally launch the Mediterranean Union.
About 39 countries, including 27 EU members and some
12 Mediterranean nations are to be covered in the union under discussion.
Algeria, Egypt, Morocco, Israel, Syria and Turkey, to
name a few, are to take part.