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Central and Eastern Europe,

Meeting of the Socialist International Committee for Central and Eastern Europe, Rome, Italy

27-28 June 1997

Rome was the venue for a meeting of the SI Committee for Central and Eastern Europe, SICEE, on 27 and 28 June 1997. Chaired by Piero Fassino (Italy, PDS) and Lászlo Kovács (Hungary, MSzP), Co-Chairs of the Committee, the meeting focused on perspectives for the process of integration of the region's countries in multilateral institutions. Delegates also reported on their national situations and the Committee discussed its future work and activities. The participants represented nearly 40 parties and organisations. After extensive discussions, the SI Committee adopted a Declaration which welcomed the major, and often very positive, transition undergone by most of the countries in the region, but also emphasised the acute social inequalities existing in some countries and the consequent need for policies balancing modernity and solidarity - the rules and the market and the redistribution of wealth. Social democratic parties, many of which are now in government, therefore had a crucial role to play, the Committee stressed. The Declaration underlined the importance of continuing European integration and of security and stability, which could best be achieved through economic, social, environment and political means, as well as through the phased enlargement of NATO and the Partnership for Peace, OSCE, and other organisations of regional cooperation. Fundamental social and democratic rights must not take second place to economic modernisation, it said. It welcomed recent political developments in Romania and Bulgaria and hoped for further positive evolution in Serbia and Montenegro, and in Turkey. Great importance was given to the safeguarding and consolidation of the Dayton Accords on peace in Bosnia, and the Committee stressed the decisive role which the international community could play in Albania and underlined that Russia and its future situation are fundamental for the prospects of the whole of Europe.



DECLARATION

1. Central and Eastern Europe has seen a transition to democracy and the market economy which has enabled most of these countries to undergo a major modernisation.

This is particularly true in some Central and Eastern European countries - namely Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovenia, Hungary, Slovakia and the Baltic states - where there are high growth rates.

However, we have also witnessed acute social inequalities and imbalances which are all the more reason for us to advocate policies aimed at a greater balance between modernity and solidarity, between the rules of the market and the redistribution of wealth.

Moreover, strong economic dynamism has not always been accompanied by adequate overall democratic development.

Social democratic and progressive forces are therefore faced with the task of bringing to completion the political and economic transition in these countries, with the objectives of social progress, equality and democracy.

2. A crucial step in tying the countries of the region into this process will be through their integration into the European Union, to which all of Central and Eastern Europe's countries look as a means of supporting their democratic stability while favouring the completion of their economic and social modernisation.

Launching the negotiations on the Union's enlargement according to the established time frame, within the first months of 1998, is crucial, as is the need to conduct the negotiations in a way which assures equal opportunity for all of the candidate countries.

Concurrently, through Cooperation Agreements and through the further use of the instrument of "association", the European Union is called on also to offer prospects for strengthened cooperation and integration for countries which are not today candidates for membership.

3. The security and stability which the countries of Central and Eastern Europe rightly desire can best be achieved through economic, social, environmental and political means. At the same time, peace and stability throughout the entire continent are possible if there is a common responsibility for implementing a new architecture of security. The Act signed in Paris by the members of NATO and Russia, and the bilateral accords signed by the Ukraine with NATO and Russia are a step in this direction.

This is the context in which we need to place the enlargement of NATO, the objective of which is not to threaten anyone, but instead to reassure all involved. This is why the enlargement of the Alliance must respond to some fundamental security needs: it must be balanced in terms of the various areas of Eastern, Central and South-Eastern Europe; it must "keep its doors open" to more than one phase of enlargement; it must use the Partnership for Peace (PFP) and the recently created Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council to provide the necessary security and stability for the entire region.

The Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) should be enabled to play a stronger role in conflict-prevention and conflict-settlement and in the promotion of a pan-European security order and of democracy within states.

Within this framework the European Union (EU) must acquire an increasing security and defence identity, and the Western European Union (WEU) can be a means to this end.

4. The SI urges that positive, multilateral and bilateral measures be taken to ensure that those countries which do not qualify for the first wave of either EU or NATO enlargement continue to be deeply involved in the developments taking place in Europe.

Institutions for regional cooperation can play a strategic role in this process. Among these are the Central European Initiative (CEI), the Black Sea Cooperation Council, the Baltic Cooperation Council, the South-Eastern Cooperation Initiative (SECI), and other forms of multilateral cooperation among states in the region. These institutions can fulfil two functions. They can favour a coherent common action among countries that are "in" and "out", so avoiding the enlargement of the EU and NATO provoking feelings of exclusion or new dividing lines through the heart of Europe. Regional institutions can also be tools for infrastructural, social and economic modernisation in countries of the region.

5. Transition in these countries is not simply linked to the economic dimension. The move from the authoritarianism of the state-party apparatus to democracy also entails the implementation of structures needed to carry out "democratic institution-building".

Central to this are:

- guaranteeing fundamental social rights;

- strong, internally democratic and pluralistic political parties;

- the establishment of the rule of law and a pluralistic society;

- the setting up of an appropriate legal and regulatory framework;

- the training of public sector managers and civil servants;

- ensuring pluralism in the media and an information sector which is equally accessible to all;

- the setting up of a new educational curriculum free from ideological oppression;

- the re-organisation of each social system in a way which, while refusing the statist logic of the past, does not however jeopardise fundamental social, individual and collective rights;

- the recognition of minority rights and implementation of policies capable of guaranteeing multi-cultural and multi- ethnic principles.

- policies which ensure sustainable development.

The Council of Europe can provide an important contribution to achieving these objectives.

6. Stability in the Balkans is an absolute priority for the security of the entire continent. The international community- and in particular the European Union - must assume a common responsibility for helping the countries of the region whose transition, for historical reasons, is slower and more difficult.

The reformist policies launched by Romania's new government - to which the Social Democratic Union contributes - prove that within the process of integration there is a real possibility to recover from the delays in the economic and political situation inherited from the past.

The recent elections in Bulgaria, although characterised by the victory of the centre-right forces, have opened up the road to stable institutions capable of promoting a period of reform.

It is also important to pursue concerted action aimed at guaranteeing stability in the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, which underlines its important contribution to peace and stability in the Balkans.

After the success of the opposition in the local elections, the next elections in Serbia and Montenegro should give the opportunity for a democratic evolution which overcomes the limits and the obstacles to a full implementation of democratic pluralism in the Yugoslav Federation. The international community should act to ensure that the elections are free and fair, and take place with open and pluralistic media.

Turkey's political evolution and democratic stability are crucial for the security of the entire region. For this reason, there is a need for political action which, while keeping Turkey firmly tied to the Euro-Atlantic institutions, favours the full recognition of civil rights and democratic principles.

7. It is of decisive importance to safeguard and consolidate the Dayton Accords which, thanks to the presence of IFOR/SFOR, guarantee peace in Bosnia. The consolidation of peace requires secure state structures and civil society.

As fragile and difficult as it is, there are no prospects for a different peace in Bosnia, and questioning it would be a very serious mistake.

The deadlock in the peace process must be overcome, and the Accords need to be fully carried out. There needs to be an effective implementation of Bosnian-Herzegovinian state institutions and the carrying out of normal, pluralistic municipal elections scheduled for September. The regional disarmament accords signed in Florence should also be fully implemented, the gradual return of refugees to their homes should be aided and pursued. The work of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia in The Hague should continue to be supported. These political objectives can be obtained only with parallel efforts for economic reconstruction with financial help provided for all of the entities and communities which make up Bosnia-Herzegovina.

A contribution to peace in Bosnia and in the region can come from re-enforcement of democracy in Croatia, where in the recent presidential elections the forces of the opposition, the SDP and others, obtained a growing consensus.

8. The international community can have an equally decisive role in Albania. The dissolution of the institutions and economy, and the risk of anarchy in Albania have been avoided by the involvement of the European Union, the OSCE and the countries which have contributed to the Italian-led Military Protection Force. The national reconciliation government, created through the collaboration of all of the country's political forces, has been able to launch the reconstruction of the state's structures. It is of decisive importance that the elections on 29 June be free and fair and that following the two rounds of elections there be a phase of political stability in which all the parties accept the results and play a positive role within Albania's democratic institutions.

To attain this objective, we strongly support the work of the High Representative of the OSCE, Franz Vranitzky.

9. Russia and its future situation are fundamental for the prospects of the entire European continent.

Although faced with numerous difficulties and acute social contradictions, this great country has seen widespread economic change. This has not been accompanied by a modernisation of the state's structures and by a spread of political democracy.

The international community's task is therefore to establish the widest possible forms of political, military, economic and cultural cooperation. This will support the establishment of the political and economic standards of a modern democracy. The transformation of the G7 into G8 sanctioned at Denver is a step in this direction, which needs to be followed by others, aimed at furthering the effective development of democracy in Russia.

10. The Caucasian Republics, where there are still unresolved conflicts and a difficult transition to democracy which are delaying economic and social development, require the elaboration of a strategy for cooperation.

The pursuit of a cooperation strategy with the Eurasian nations and the states of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) is equally important. The international community must extend relations with and opportunities for these countries.

11. The role of the forces of social democracy in achieving these objectives is crucial. All the more so today, when the SI has member parties in all of the countries of Central and South-Eastern Europe and where several of these are in government.

The SI and its parties feel a responsibility to respond, with constant political initiatives and adequate programmes, to the demand for democracy, integration and development coming from public opinion in those countries.

At the same time, the SI sees an urgent need to favour the growth of a social democratic presence in Russia and in the other states of the CIS. To this end, it intends to establish a special action programme.


 

LIST OF PARTICIPANTS

Co-Chair of SICEE
Piero Fassino
(Italy, PDS)

Co-Chair of SICEE
Lászlo Kovács
(Hungary, MSzP)

Secretary General of the Socialist International
Luis Ayala

ARMENIA
ARF Armenian Socialist Party
Mario Nalpatian

AUSTRIA
Social Democratic Party of Austria, SPÖ

Alfred Gusenbauer
Lisl Kauer

AZERBAIJAN
Social Democratic Party of Azerbaijan, SDPA

Araz Alizadeh

BELGIUM
Socialist Party, PS

Jean-Louis Verheyden
Socialist Party, SP
Willy Claes

BOSNIA & HERZEGOVINA
Union of Bosnian & Herzegovinian Social Democrats, UBSD

Zdenko Martkovic
Arif Baksic

BULGARIA
Bulgarian Social Democratic Party, BSDP

Petar Dertliev

FINLAND
Finnish Social Democratic Party, SDP

Markus Aaltonen

FRANCE
Socialist Party, PS

Sonia Mink

GEORGIA
Citizens' Union of Georgia, CUG

Michael Machavariani

GERMANY
Social Democratic Party of Germany, SPD

Michael Hofmann

GREAT BRITAIN
Labour Party

Nick Sigler

GREECE
Panhellenic Socialist Movement, PASOK

Dimitris Batzelis

HUNGARY
Hungarian Socialist Party, MSzP

Vilmos Szabó
György Hegyi

ISRAEL
Israel Labour Party

Dov Peer

ITALY
Democratic Party of the Left, PDS

Umberto Ranieri
Roberto Cuillo
Luigi Colajanni
Graziano Cioni
Giorgio Rossetti
Enzo Lavarra
Marta Dassù
Giovanni Magnolini

ITALY
Italian Socialists, SI

Luca Cefisi
Mario Didò
Roberto Villietti

LITHUANIA
Lithuanian Social Democratic Party, LSDP

Daiva Jakaité

FYR MACEDONIA
Social Democratic Union of Macedonia, SDUM

Ilinka Mitreva

MONTENEGRO
Social Democratic Party of Montenegro, SDPM

Dragisa Burzan

NETHERLANDS
Labour Party, PvdA

Arjen Berkvens

POLAND
Social Democracy of the Republic of Poland, SdRP

Tadeusz Iwinski

ROMANIA
Democratic Party, PD

Cazimir Benedict Ionescu
Romanian Social Democratic Party, PSDR

Constantin Avramescu
Ioan Sorin Marinescu

SLOVAK REPUBLIC
Party of the Democratic Left, SDL

Peter Weiss

SLOVAK REPUBLIC
Slovak Social Democratic Party, SDSS

Jaroslav Riha
Vladimir Drozda
Jozef Mozolík

SLOVENIA
United List, ZL

Natasa Kovac

SPAIN
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party, PSOE

Raimon Obiols
María Solanas

SWEDEN
Swedish Social Democratic Party, SAP

Jerry Wiklund

International Union of Socialist Youth, IUSY
Nicola Zingaretti
Francesco Anghelone

Parliamentary Group of the PES
Nadia Van Hamme

Party of European Socialists, PES
Jean-François Vallin

Socialist International Women, SIW
Zita Gurmai

Office of SI President
Axel Queval


Guests:

CROATIA
Social Democratic Party, SDP

Drago Kraljevic


European Forum for Democracy and Solidarity
Conny Fredriksson


Friedrich Ebert Foundation
Klaus Lindenberg

RUSSIAN FEDERATION
Russian Social Democratic Union, RSDU

Vassily Lipitsky


UKRAINE
Social Democratic Party

Olena Skomorochtchenko


Individual Guests:
Albania Ilir Meta
Bulgaria Ivailo Kalfin

 



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