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European Union Set to Expand
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http://enews.voanews.com/t?r=279&ctl=141EADC:A6F02AD83191E1600DFC04B7380A2E049574F7DCC14957C0 Romania and
Bulgaria may be approved in October; Turkey, Croatia and Serbia may
have to wait longer





A man reads a newspaper behind a bus window painted with the EU sign
and a map of Bulgaria, in Sofia, September 25, 2006The European Union
gives the green light today for Romania and Bulgaria to join the
25-member block in January. The two Eastern European countries may the
last to join the EU for a while.

The European Commission's recommendation for Romania and Bulgaria to
join the European Union comes with some caveats. Both countries must
continue reforms in a number of areas, including cracking down on
corruption and organized crime, and must improve their justice systems
and other branches of government. If they fall behind, the two
countries risk losing some membership benefits, including EU
assistance.

European Union leaders are expected to formally approve their
membership in October. With Romania and Bulgaria joining the EU ranks,
the block will swell to 27 members, next year.

The EU is unlikely to admit more members in the near future.

European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso believes the bloc
should reform its institutions before inviting other countries to
join. Otherwise, he says, the union will be to unwieldy. That news may
disappoint prospective EU candidates, such as Turkey, Croatia and
Serbia.

Still, experts like former EU Commissioner Yves Thibault de Silguy
believe reforming the EU's institutions is vital.

In an interview on France Info radio Tuesday, Thibault de Silguy said,
when EU institutions were first established, they were intended for a
far-smaller body of nations. He says future enlargement will be even
more difficult, because EU hopefuls like the Balkan countries and
Turkey are very different countries from the Western European
countries that form the bloc's core.

The proposed European Constitution would have facilitated
institutional reform. But the charter has been on hold, since France
and the Netherlands rejected it, last year.