Section: EUobserver (EU)
EUobserver is an independent European Union online newspaper that was founded
in 2000. It is not commercial. Its headquater is in Brussels, Belgium, EU. The
owner of EUobserver is non-profit organization ASBL.
The official website is EUobserver
[Analysis] Ex-Soviet states need more EU clarity
Sooner or later, the EU will have to give a clear answer on enlargement to Georgia, Moldova, and Ukraine, the EU foreign service’s former top official, Pierre Vimont, says. …read more Source:...
EU keeps former Soviet countries at arm’s length
The EU kept former Soviet states at arm’s length in the Riga summit, held in the shadow of Russia’s aggression in Ukraine. Greece and the UK referendum gatecrashed the event. …read more Source:...
EU reaches out to Eastern Partnership countries
EU countries have acknowledged Ukraine, Georgia and Moldova’s EU aspirations but stopped short of giving a clear enlargement perspective. …read more Source:...
Eastern Partnership: in search of meaning
Twenty-five EU leaders and six former Soviet states meeting in the shadow of the Ukraine crisis and amid divergent views on future relations. …read more Source:...
Russia to reward EU sanctions critics with food exports
Russia says firms from Cyprus, Greece, and Hungary – the leading critics of EU sanctions – will be first in line to restart food exports if relations improve. …read more Source:...
[Feature] A year in Ukraine: from Maidan to Donbas
Canadian photojournalist Christopher Bobyn reports from the contact line in the Ukraine-Russia conflict. …read more Source:...
[Opinion] Germans and Americans differ over Russia
Disagreement over how tough to be with Russia potentially foreshadows new stress in the US-German relationship and, by extension, transatlantic solidarity over what to do about Ukraine. …read more Source:...
[Opinion] ‘We reject Soviet-style parading of military might’
The tendency to ignore lessons of the past must be stopped before it is too late, writes Petro Poroshenko. …read more Source:...
[Ticker] Slain activist’s report highlights Russian cost of Ukraine war
A report on the Ukraine war, compiled by the late Russian opposition leader, Boris Nemtsov, and published Tuesday, says at least 220 Russian soldiers have been killed in Ukraine and that the conflict has cost the Russian taxpayer $2.5bn. Nemtsov was murdered in February, but colleagues finished his text. …read more Source:...
[Ticker] Nato urges Russia to stop ‘support’ for Ukraine separatists
Nato head Stoltenberg said Monday Russia has a “special responsibility” for ending “a disturbing trend” of “ceasefire violations, obstruction of [international] monitors and continued Russian support for the separatists” in Ukraine. He noted a Nato ministers’ meeting in Turkey Tuesday will “address...