Chirac Underlined French Support to Estonia on EU and NATO Course
Published:
5 August 2001 y., Sunday
French President Jacques Chirac payed a state visit to Estonia. In meetings with Estonian President Lennart Meri and the Prime Minister Mart Laar he underlined that France actively supports Estonia's accession to the European Union.
Chirac hopes that Estonia will conclude accession talks by the end of the next year, in order to take part in elections to the European parliament as a full member. "I have to admit that so far Estonia has had no need for French support, Estonia's reform policy has been excellent and it is therefore among the front-runners," the French head of state said. Chirac also emphasized that he accepts Estonia's choice to accede to NATO.
"The French position is that each country is free to choose an alliance that suits it," Chirac told. He said that France takes a positive view of the Baltic countries' choice to seek membership in NATO, but also underlined that enlargement of the alliance must not lead to new dividing lines and no one should take this as an aggression. According to Chirac political relations between the two countries are good and also French culture is represented in the Baltic countries. "But we do not have an economic presence here and it requires a serious effort to achieve a position of great potential on the markets," the French head of state said. Chirac said France was grateful for what Estonia had done in the teaching of French and added that President Lennart Meri has a full command of French. As to the Baltic countries’ embassy buildings Chirac said that "It was the only controversial issue between France and the Baltic countries and I am very glad that we have settled the problem."
Šaltinis:
vm.ee
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
BMW recently highlighted an electric scooter, currently still in the concept phase, targeted at green-leaning commuters.
more »
"I'm excited about where these findings could take us in terms of eventually developing a new type of analgesic for people who suffer from chronic pain."
more »
The Anonymous hackers now have names, at least in Italy. A series of dawn searches this morning concluded investigations by IT police, led by Antonio Abruzzese, into coordinated computer attacks by the group over the past few months.
more »
He world's first flying car has been authorized to use roads while flying in the air.
more »
This is the adjustable-height desk that pairs with a semi-recumbent elliptical trainer to let users exercise while on the job.
more »
Scientists at the Chinese University of Hong Kong have developed an autonomous, caterpillar-inspired robot, designed to climb trees and spot danger to forests via a built-in camera.
more »
Nuclear officials confident over safety levels of flooded nuclear power plant.
more »
A 19 year old computer hacker in London has been released on bail after being charged with attacking government websites.
more »
Greek Communists rally at historical monument in Athens to protest new round of austerity measures
more »
Imagine flying from Tokyo to Paris in less than two and a half hours, without having to burn tons of fossil fuel. One day it might be possible. The concept of zero-emissions, supersonic flight is being explored by European aircraft maker, EADS.
more »