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Wednesday, 12 December, 2001, 18:00 GMT

Prodi demands action not words


Romano Prodi
Prodi complains that projects are constantly held up
The President of the European Commission, Romano Prodi, has issued a stern rebuke to the 15 European Union member states ahead of Friday's Laeken summit, urging them to stop just talking about big ideas and start implementing some of their promises.



When general commitments have to be translated into a specific political decision you find all sorts of problems arising
Romano Prodi

Mr Prodi complained that members would happily agree to an idea in principle, but when it came to doing something, they would find financial and political excuses to stall it.

He singled out the Galileo satellite project and plans for an EU-wide patent as examples of projects which had become bogged down.

At Laeken, the 15 heads of state will establish a convention on the future of Europe, which will discuss reforms of the EU aimed at making the organisation more transparent and democratic.

Pitfalls

But Mr Prodi said before the EU embarked on new projects, it had to get on with what it had already committed itself to.



It really beggars belief that you have the research ministers all enthusiastically agreeing to it and then the other subsequent councils blocking it
Romano Prodi

"When there are general commitments, people smilingly adopt them," he said.

"But when these general commitments have to be translated into a specific political decision you find all sorts of problems arising. Domestic politics gets involved, financial issues are raised, all that sort of thing".

He said the lack of political will to follow projects through was expensive and unsustainable.

The Galileo satellite navigation project, aimed at setting up a rival to the American Global Positioning System, has been on the agendas of many summits and will reappear at Laeken again.

But there is still no sign that the continuing squabbles over funding will be resolved this week.

"There are all sorts of pitfalls before it and it really beggars belief that you have the research ministers all enthusiastically agreeing to it and then the other subsequent councils blocking it," Mr Prodi said.

Disagreements have also dogged the EU's anti-terror plans, with Italy blocking the proposed Europe-wide arrest warrant until a last minute U-turn on Tuesday.


Related to this story:
Italy U-turn on arrest warrant (11 Dec 01 | Europe) Q&A: The EU Laeken summit (10 Dec 01 | Europe) Italy heads for EU showdown (08 Dec 01 | Europe) Italy urged to reconsider warrant (08 Dec 01 | UK Politics) Italy blocks EU warrant plans (06 Dec 01 | Europe) Italy's isolation puts Berlusconi in spotlight (07 Dec 01 | Europe) EU to push through terror laws (03 Dec 01 | Europe) Agreement on EU-wide arrest warrants (16 Nov 01 | UK Politics) Blair welcomes EU anti-terror support (19 Oct 01 | UK Politics)


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