Bulgaria’s main opposition party has said it will support lifting the country’s veto on the start of EU accession talks with North Macedonia, in what could herald a significant breakthrough in the stalled process of the bloc’s enlargement in the western Balkans, reported the Financial Times on Wednesday.
Boyko Borisov, a former Bulgarian prime minister, said his centre-right GERB party would vote in favour of beginning the EU negotiations. If adopted by Bulgaria’s parliament, the move would also unlock membership talks for Albania as leaders of western Balkan countries and the EU prepare to meet on Thursday morning.
“This is the most correct decision for the future of the Balkans, the EU and Bulgaria,” said Borisov. “We will not remain on the dark side of Eurasia, we will not allow Putinisation,” referring to the influence of Russian president Vladimir Putin in the wider region.
However, GERB and the government were at loggerheads over whether ministers or parliament should take the initiative in lifting the veto. EU membership for North Macedonia is unpopular in Bulgaria and allies of Kiril Petkov, Bulgaria’s reformist prime minister, suspect GERB is trying to lay a political trap.
European officials fear that continued delay to EU enlargement would create political instability in the western Balkans and disillusionment about Brussels’ endorsement of the region’s western orientation, which could be exploited by Russia.
North Macedonia and Albania’s membership applications have been linked together by the EU. The former has been an EU candidate country since 2005 without any progress on accession talks despite meeting many of the bloc’s membership requirements, primarily due to objections over the new country’s expressions of national identity first from Greece and then Bulgaria.
The EU’s broader stance towards eastern expansion has shifted since Putin’s full-blown invasion of Ukraine began in February, after years of resistance to potential new members. The bloc is set to agree to make Ukraine and Moldova official candidate countries this week, alongside the fresh effort to unblock the stalled process in the western Balkans.
“This is a clear signal, and a positive,” said a senior EU official of Borisov’s statement. “[But] it is not in our hands,” the official said, adding that Brussels was urging the Bulgarian parliament to take a decision as soon as possible. /Argumentum.al