dinsdag 24 februari 2009

Bosnisch volkslied krijgt tekst

Na tien jaar heeft het Bosnische volkslied eindelijk tekst gekregen. Opmerkelijk is dat er niet gesproken wordt over de twee entiteiten, noch over de verschillende etnische groepen. Kortom, een 'politiek correct' volkslied:

Ti si svjetlost duse
Vjecne vatre plam
Majko nasa zemljo Bosno
Tebi pripadam

Divno plavo nebo
Hercegovine
U srcu su tvoje rijeke
Tvoje planine

Ponosna i slavna
Krajina predaka
Zivjeces u srcu nasem
Dov'jeka

Pokoljenja tvoja
Kazuju jedno:
Mi idemo u budućnost
Zajedno!

dinsdag 17 februari 2009

Oekraïne riskeert faillissement

Bank analysts predict that Ukraine is heading for a historic default on its national debt, in a scenario that could complicate EU-Ukraine relations and have an impact on the recent Russia-Ukraine gas transit deal.
Ukrainian industrial production has plunged 26 percent compared to last year. The hryvna has lost over a third of its value against the US dollar and the International Monetary Fund is hesitating on payments of a rescue loan as Kiev declines to keep down public spending.
The political battle between President Viktor Yushchenko and Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko ahead of upcoming presidential elections is making matters worse.
Some experts even fear that Mr Yushchenko will use his influence over the central bank to prevent it from bailing out the Tymoshenko government on debt repayments. "One party could provoke this kind of sovereign default to reap a political benefit," HSBC bank expert Alexander Morozov said. "In that case, Tymoshenko could not fulfill promises to her electorate in terms of paying wages and pensions and so on."
If Ukraine defaults, Austrian, French, Swedish, Italian and German banks stand to be the worst losers, with collective exposure of around €30 billion ($40bn) in the country, according to the Bank of International Settlements.
The European Commission is monitoring the situation with "concern." But for the time being, there is no talk in the EU of crafting a rescue package from institutions such as the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, as EU states concentrate on the economic fall-out at home.

donderdag 12 februari 2009

“The Birthday Wish”

Close your eyes. Make a wish. Now blow out the candle. On the first birthday of Kosova’s independence, there is certainly an awful lot to wish for.
Casey Cooper Johnson wenst Kosovo alvast magie toe.
That is why on Kosova’s first birthday party, [...] I have decided to bring one hundred of my favorite magicians from around the world to come and perform miracles on our needy little nation. We’re gonna pull electric bunny rabbits from KEK’s hard hats. We’re gonna turn corrupt officials into frogs. We’re gonna break human rights loose from the chained underwater cage, and leap over the Mitrovica bridge on our motorcycles. We’ll produce factories and farms from our bags of tricks and pull good teachers out of children’s noses. And as the big birthday surprise, we are going to hypnotize Presidents Tadic and Putin and make them irrevocably recognize Kosova’s independence. It’s gonna be a real spectacular show, ladies and gentlemen.

Slovenië ratificeert NATO akkoorden Albanië en Kroatië

Slovenia's parliament ratified the NATO accession of Albania and Croatia on Monday, paving the way for the alliance’s enlargement in the Balkans.

Slovenia’s ratification was keeping NATO officials on their toes. The border dispute with Croatia has already posed big problems in Zagreb’s path towards European Union membership, with Slovenia blocking Croatia's EU accession talks in December. Many in NATO feared that Slovenia might do the same for Croatia’s membership in NATO, leaving both Albania and Croatia out and overshadowing the summit marking the 60-th anniversary of the alliance.

The protocol for Albania was backed unanimously in the Slovenian parliament. Croatia's passed by a large majority although nationalist parties called for a boycott.

Slovenian Prime Minister Borut Pahor said before Monday's vote that the NATO membership issue was different from the EU accession process.

"Slovenia's national interests are not endangered by the debate on Croatia's accession to NATO," he told deputies and urged them to back the ratification.

Source: BalkanInsight

vrijdag 6 februari 2009

Rusland noodzakelijk om Nabucco te laten functioneren?

At last week’s Nabucco summit, the European Union took decisive steps by pledging the firmest possible political support for the project, in order to disperse any doubts that its intention to build a pipeline whose sole purpose is to supply Europe with non-Russian gas is indeed real. This week, the story took an unexpected turn. The Director of the Nabucco project Reinhard Mitschek said that the Nabucco consortium was open to Russia’s participation, and was ready to negotiate.
Russia has been working on its own pipeline dubbed South Stream, which targets Italy and Austria, while Nabucco is supposed to run from Turkey to Austria. The two are perceived as rivals, and the Russian leadership has on more than one occasion voiced concerns over the feasibility and viability of Nabucco, as the consortium comprises only transit countries, and not a single producer. This could be the main reason why Russia came into the picture. The Nabucco pipeline was conceived in 2002 and strongly backed by the United States as a means to free Europe from excessive Russian influence, since Russia has been the source of almost half of the gas the EU consumed.
Central Asian countries have been considered the key producers which could provide the 30 billion cubic meters necessary to fill Nabucco and diversify Europe’s energy supplies. Turkmenistan’s and Kazakhstan’s having participated in last week’s summit was seen as a positive signal that both countries were ready to cooperate. [cfr. EU puts energy hopes into Turkmenistan 'black hole'] The Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev stated that his country is prepared to double gas production in order to participate in Nabucco. At the same time, he pointed out the need for transit contracts with EU countries, as well as funding and a clarification of the EU’s energy policy.
The two other possible alternatives are Iran and the U.S.-backed Iraq. The former would hardly provide Europe with more energy security than Russia does, while the latter is still a very distant possibility.
Gas from Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan is already exported to Europe, but it goes via Russia, which imports it and then resells it to consumers.
In any case, Russia and Iran are going to have leverage in the project, since both are members of the Caspian treaty and their approval would be necessary to lay pipelines across the Caspian Sea.
Turkey would be a key transit country for Nabucco, and this could also be a problem. The country, which is aspiring to EU membership, could be tempted to use the pipeline as a bargaining chip to speed up its integration with the union.
Russia could make significant gains from scrapping South Stream and turning to Nabucco instead. The two pipelines have been seen as rivals, and the Czech Prime Minister Mirek Topolanek called South Stream a “direct threat” to Nabucco. The pipelines are going to have the same capacity, and both are scheduled to begin operating in 2013. However, it has been estimated that South Stream could end up costing twice as much as the $8 billion Nabucco. Acting as a major or even the sole gas producer could also help Russia to retain its influence over Europe, marking for a significant gain on the political side.
Source: Russia Profile

donderdag 5 februari 2009

NATO train journeys through South-Eastern Europe

Known as the GLOBSEC Express, the NATO train started running in 2007 with the aim of informally gathering young people from Central and southeastern Europe to discuss the importance of Euro-Atlantic integration and NATO’s role in security provision.
Nice iniciative!
More information: www.globsec.sk

woensdag 4 februari 2009

Val Letse regering?

As unrest spreads in Latvia as a result of the worsening economic crisis, the government faces a no confidence vote in the parliament on Wednesday (4 February). The vote could see the first European Union government - and the second in Europe after Iceland - felled by the financial and economic turmoil that has hit Latvia harder than most other states in the 27-member bloc.
On Tuesday, the country's agriculture minister resigned in the wake of farmer protests that blocked the main road around the capital, Riga, and saw the agriculture ministry building surrounded by tractors. The farmers lit bonfires outside the ministry building and demanded the minister resign. The government convened an emergency meeting out of which emerged €34 million (22m lats) in fresh aid for the farmers. Shortly after Prime Minister Ivars Godmanis announced the decision, the agriculture minister, Martyns Roze, fell on his sword.
The economic crisis has bludgeoned the country's farmers, whose productivity has slid as prices plunge. The losses are bankrupting rural Latvia, with producers unable to pay their loans and processing firms going out of business.
The industrial sector has also dropped off the cliff, with industrial production dropping 2.5 percent in December, equal to a year-on-year decline of 14.2 percent, according to figures released on Tuesday by Statistics Latvia. The fall comes atop an already steep drop of 3.1 percent in November. Manufacturing has been pummelled in particular, seeing a decline of 18.2 percent on an annual basis.
Some 70 percent of the people have lost faith in the government according to polls and last week, the Union of Greens and Farmers said it would abandon the ruling coalition if the government did not come up with additional aid for farmers.
Source: EUobserver