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East European delegates debate EU enlargement![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() East European delegates debate EU enlargement Delegates from social partner organisations in eight of the EU applicant countries will discuss the implications of EU integration and enlargement for their members at a meeting in Liberty Hall, Dublin, on Friday, October 11. (This is a SIPTU Press Release & was posted to the NO to Nice list by a SIPTU member who is campaigning for a no vote.)
The conference will be addressed by delegates from: Latvia, Estonia, SIPTU General President, Des Geraghty, said "this conference will provide an ICTU General Secretary David Begg added "if Europe is to establish a fairer Hosted by SIPTU and part funded by the EU Phare Programme, it is intended
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Jump To Comment: 1For those that don't know what Phare is, it's part of the neoliberal strategy to subordinate the economies of eastern European states as discussed in the book mentioned here:
http://www.indymedia.ie/cgi-bin/newswire.cgi?id=14160
That work suggests that Phare and associated programs have resulted in so-called "humanitarian" aid being channelled into the development of private businesses and the "restructuring" of the economies hosting the parasitic recipient businesses so that their public resources are available for exploitation by the aid "donors". One of the essays contained in the collection discusses how this is similar to certain models of _imperium_ , one of whose important characteristics is the flow of materials from the edges of empire to the center.
The official propaganda site for Phare (and many other EU engorgement programs is here):
http://europa.eu.int/comm/enlargement/pas/phare/
One of the main effects of Phare and the associated SAPARD programs is the training and construction of the local bureaucracies to ease the administration of the soon-to-be-added outer colonies of the European Union. This build-up has been occuring as a "pre-accession" process since at least 1998 under this program.
Given that PHARE has spent $11billion in an attempt to access the natural and human resources in eastern Europe why does the Irish electorate think that it has any say on the process? Indeed we could be forgiven for thinking that there are other more unpleasant things contained in the Nice Treaty (such as article 133) that we are being asked to rubber stamp.
Let's say No to Nice! Yes to a socialist Europe with full freedom of travel for EU members, full health care, good schools, and no corrupt capitalists.