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Borjana Krišto is the head of government of Bosnia-Herzegovina

Photo: Armin Durgut / AP

The EU summit agreed to start accession negotiations with the Western Balkan state of Bosnia-Herzegovina. EU Council President Charles Michel announced this on Platform X in the evening.

The country belongs to the European family, he wrote. “Now the hard work must be continued steadily.” The approval had already been evident at the EU summit in Brussels.

However, the first so-called accession conference will only be organized once Bosnia-Herzegovina has implemented reform requirements that have not yet been met. This includes, among other things, the rule of law in the country and the fight against corruption and organized crime.

Not only Germany and Austria, but also the Netherlands, which is usually skeptical when it comes to enlargement, agreed to the EU Commission's recommendation.

The EU had already offered Bosnia-Herzegovina the prospect of joining in 2003, and it officially submitted an application in 2016. It was accepted into the group of candidate countries in 2022. The reason for this was also the concern that the Balkan country with around 3.2 million inhabitants could otherwise orientate itself towards Russia or China. States such as Austria in particular had recently pushed for Bosnia-Herzegovina to be given the prospect of progress in the accession process.

It is unclear how long it will take from the start of accession talks to EU accession. Turkey, for example, became an EU candidate in 1999 - and has probably never been further away from membership than it is today. Theoretically, a candidate for membership can never become a member.

Of the six Western Balkan states, only the Republic of Kosovo is not a candidate for membership. However, the country has already submitted an application for membership. For Europe's youngest state, it was a rather symbolic act: EU membership is currently not within reach for the country, which has been independent since 2008. The main obstacle is that five EU countries - Spain, Romania, Slovakia, Greece and Cyprus - do not recognize Kosovo.

The heads of state and government's decision on Bosnia-Herzegovina came on the recommendation of Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. »Of course, further progress is required in order to be accepted into our Union. But the country shows that it can meet the accession criteria and supports the aspirations of its citizens to become part of our family," she said in a recent speech at the European Parliament in Strasbourg.

svs/dpa/Reuters