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Expanding Europe
Do you know who's about to join Europe?
Breakfast's main story this morning was that the European Union is on the brink of huge expansion.
Leaders gathering in Copenhagen are within an ace of agreeing a multi-billion pound deal which will let in ten new countries (the EU currently has 15 members) This morning, Breakfast found out what "enlargement" will mean for the rest of us. We'll also asked: can you name the ten new countries who are on their way into Europe? We went to Newcastle, Nottingham and Cardiff to find out.
Speaking live from Copenhagen, where the summit will take place today, he told us that Europe as a whole will benefit from new trading opportunities. "The European Union has a trade surplus with these countries - higher than the United States. "The market chances from this are much bigger than the costs we'll have to pay from our budget." The ten new states have had to fulfill strict conditions, he added, which include full democracy and a decent human rights record. That's why Turkey's application won't be re-considered until the Autumn of 2004 at the earliest.
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Further details from BBC News Online A day of last minute horse-trading is expected as the 15 EU members and the 10 candidate states hammer the final details of the deal in Copenhagen.
But there was disappointment for Turkey after the leaders decided it will have to wait at least two more years before it is invited to hold membership talks. The new funding deal offers the 10 candidates about 1.5bn euros more than a previous package approved in October. It now awaits approval by the candidates countries themselves.
Poland, the largest of the states seeking membership, has been holding out for an even more generous offer. But earlier the Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen warned them that there was no more money and if they refused the offer they could risk delaying membership until at least 2007. Denmark will hold individual meetings on Friday with the candidates which have not yet accepted terms of accession.
But most of the candidate countries signalled their willingness to accept the EU's entry conditions ahead of the summit and three of them - Cyprus, Estonia and Slovakia - have already wrapped up formal talks. Poland is also expected to follow suit in the end. "I believe there are fairly good chances to conclude with fairly positive results even tomorrow, with a bit of flexibility, a bit of good will," the country's chief negotiator Jan Truszczynski said as he arrived in Copenhagen late on Thursday. Mr Rasmussen is set to meet Polish Prime Minister Leszek Miller at 0800 (0700 GMT). Dashed hopes Also topping the agenda of the two-day summit in Copenhagen is the thorny issue of Turkey's membership ambitions.
Turkey had been pressing for an immediate start to its negotiations on joining the EU. The BBC's correspondent in Copenhagen, Chris Morris, said that Turkey will be very disappointed with the offer of talks in 2004. It has been kept waiting for decades because of its poor human rights record, but the newly-elected government believes a recent rush of new legislation means it deserves to begin talks soon. France and Germany have both backed 2005 as a starting date, provided Turkey meets its obligations on human rights. But former French President Valery Giscard d'Estaing, who is chairing a forum on Europe's future, has made clear his view that Turkey - as an eastern, mainly Muslim country - has no place in the EU.
Tell us what you think of EU enlargement To have your say, e-mail us at breakfasttv@bbc.co.uk
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See also:
12 Dec 02 | Europe
12 Dec 02 | Europe
11 Dec 02 | Europe
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