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EU 'failing its people'

BBC | 30.11.2001 17:05

BBC Article today on divisions between the EU and it's citizens.

Belgium says the European Union is out of touch with its citizens and has failed to placate its critics in a draft document prepared for the Laeken summit in two weeks' time.

[The European citizen] no longer recognises himself in the European institutions, which he criticises as heavy, rigid and above all
lacking in transparency
Belgian document

Drawn up by Belgian Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt, whose country currently holds the EU presidency, the leaked draft says the union is facing an identity crisis and a gulf is opening between the people and Brussels.

It also contains Belgium's proposals for a radical reform of EU institutions to stem a rising tide of Euroscepticism and prepare for the admission of 10 new members in 2004.

Correspondents say the document may yet undergo several changes before being presented at the Laeken conference.

Secretive
Mr Verhofstadt is touring EU capitals with the draft document, entitled The Future of the European Union.

Belgian draft proposals
Directly elected European president

European Constitution

Enshrining Charter of Fundamental Rights in EU law

Extension of qualified majority voting

Cross-European political parties

Council of Ministers to become second parliament

"A gulf has opened up between the citizen and the European
institutions... He [the citizen] no longer recognises himself in the European
institutions, which he criticises as heavy, rigid and above all
lacking in transparency," the document says.

It goes on to say that citizens find the union is too little involved in the issues that matter and interferes too much in matters best left to national governments.


People also find that too much is being done behind closed doors, without public knowledge or democratic control, the report
found.


The UK's Times newspaper reports that the French Government, in particular, believes that the draft prejudges too many issues that should be debated further and decided by heads of government in 2004.



Bigger terror role
More Eurosceptical states, such as Sweden and Britain, are likely to disagree with proposals to transfer more power to a Commission headed by an elected president, at the expense of national governments.



As further proof of disenchantment, the document cites Denmark's and Ireland's No votes in recent referendums on European questions, as well as the low turnout in recent Euro-elections.

Surveys show that ordinary citizens want the EU to play a bigger role in fighting terrorism, organised crime and illegal immigration and tackling environmental ills, the report says.

"The citizen demands a clear, transparent, efficient and democratic approach (from Europe)... There is no doubt that Europe must, for this reason, fundamentally reform itself, refresh its ideas and in a certain way reinvent itself," the document says.

BBC
- Homepage: http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/europe/newsid_1684000/1684815.stm

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  1. Europe is shit — Reginald Mitchell