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    Croats say 'yes' to EU membership

    ZAGREB, Croatia (AP) — Croatians voted Sunday in favor of joining the European Union amid a record small referendum turnout — a sign of how much the debt-stricken 27-nation bloc has lost in its appeal within the aspiring members states.

    Croatia's state referendum commission said that with about 50 percent of the ballot calculated, about 67 percent of those who took part in the referendum answered "yes" to the question: "Do you support the membership of the Republic of Croatia in the European Union?"

    About 32 percent were against, while the rest of the ballots were invalid. About 42 percent of eligible voters were estimated to have taken part in the referendum, illustrating voters' apathy toward the 27-nation bloc.

    "The people are obviously tired," Prime Minister Zoran Milanovic said. "It would have been better that the turnout was larger, but that's reality."

    Croatia signed an EU accession treaty last year and will become its 28th member in July 2013 after all the bloc's states ratify the deal.

    The Croats were deeply divided before the referendum.

    Those who were for the EU say their Balkan country's troubled economy — burdened by recession, a euro48-billion ($61-billion) foreign debt and a 17 percent unemployment rate — will revive because of access to wider European markets and job opportunities that the membership should bring.

    "It's a big moment in our history ... we are joining more successful countries in Europe," Croatia's President Ivo Josipovic said after casting his ballot. "I'm happy that Europe will become my home."

    Opponents said Croatia has nothing to gain by entering the bloc, which is fighting off the bankruptcy of some of its members. They said that Croatia will only lose its sovereignty and the national identity it fought for in a war for independence from Yugoslavia in the 1990s.

    "I voted against because I don't think we'll do well in the EU," said university student Matea Kolenc, 23. "I heard a lot of bad things about the EU, its economic situation and what it has to offer."

    The Balkan nation started negotiating its EU entry six years ago, but since then the popularity of the bloc has faded, as Croats realize that EU membership would not automatically lead to prosperity.

    Many in Croatia — and the rest of the EU — also wonder what is the bloc going to gain from the country that is ripe with corruption and has economic woes that are among the deepest in the Balkans.

    Croatia's credit rating was last year reduced to a step above junk by ratings agency Standard & Poor's which cited its deteriorating fiscal position and external financing for its decision. If it enters the EU in 2013, Croatia won't be adopting the euro currency for several more years, and is unlikely to contribute to its further plunge.

    In a sign of deep divisions in Croatia over the membership, police clashed Saturday in downtown Zagreb with a group of nationalist protesters who attempted to take down an EU flag.

    Numerous anti-EU graffiti, some saying "Stop the Destruction, No to EU," appeared Sunday on the walls of voting stations in the Croatian Adriatic coast port of Split, the hotbed of nationalists. Police covered the signs with white paint.

    Croatian officials, who have launched a pro-EU campaign before the referendum, warned that a "no" vote would deprive the country of the much-needed accession funds, and that even the payment of pensions for retirees and war veterans could be in jeopardy.

    Croatia has received around euro150 million ($193 million) in pre-accession assistance since 2007. It is to receive another euro150 million for 2012 and euro95 million ($122 million) in 2013.

    "Clearly all that funding will be stopped if the Croats say no in the referendum," Croatia's Foreign Minister Vesna Pusic said.

    Croatia's pro-government media have also tried to scare Croatians by saying that if they reject the EU, they would have to return to some sort of a Balkan union with their former wartime foes, Serbia, which has been struggling to gain a candidacy status in the bloc.

    The approval rating for EU membership has also dropped to 52 percent in Serbia because of Germany's conditioning for the candidacy with the de facto recognizing of the independence of its former Kosovo province which declared independence in 2008.

    ___

    Eldar Emric contributed to this report.

     
    • Freedom  •  1 mth 22 days ago
      The interesting thing is that every country is in debt. The question is to whom? and where is all the money?
    • Emir  •  Baltimore, Maryland  •  1 mth 22 days ago
      Croatia is aware that EU is in bad shape. But, they join anyways ?! It's contradicting. Croatia is just doing this because they think, they can't lose nothing here. But, I wouldn't be so sure of that...
    • L  •  1 mth 22 days ago
      The EU promises rules from faceless unelected bureaucrats in Brussels who do the bidding of the bankers in Germany, France, and the UK. The EU can't bail out banks and help countries have a high standard of living for the workers, so the EU concentrates on helping bankers. Croatia will be no richer than Greece or Ireland having entered the thieves den......
    • pete  •  Oakland, California  •  1 mth 22 days ago
      Bad move, you will be Greece a few years after the Rothchilds squeeze every cent out of all of you
    • steve  •  Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania  •  1 mth 22 days ago
      Croatian Bankers need mo' money for payoffs. End of story.
    • Smokey Joe  •  Sunnyvale, California  •  1 mth 22 days ago
      Lookout Croatia ! They just want what little money you have. EU is Bernie Madoff x 1000000. And the U.S. is not much better.
    • Boney  •  1 mth 22 days ago
      NEWSFLASH: Joe Paterno still dead.
    • Angelo  •  1 mth 22 days ago
      Croats are basicly against the merger because of Europe's woes. However, they are also being bribed and extorted into agreement, being told its for their economic benefit.
    • nakedguydb  •  Santiago, Panama  •  1 mth 22 days ago
      QUOTE ....Croatia's pro-government media have also tried to scare Croatians by saying that if they reject the EU, they would have to return to some sort of a Balkan union with their former wartime foes, Serbia, which has been struggling to gain a candidacy status in the bloc. and good to see that the media has been bought just like those in the US
    • Hi  •  1 mth 22 days ago
      EU is a cancer...they are run by big corporations.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Centro, Mexico  •  1 mth 22 days ago
      Croatia? Well, everything is going to get a lot better now!!
    • Young Barry  •  1 mth 22 days ago
      The whole concept of a EU is falling apart. Most everyone is bankrupt or will be in a decade. Why would you do such a thing?
    • Greg  •  Lawrence, Kansas  •  1 mth 22 days ago
      As a third-generation Croatian-American, I'm finding it sad to see yet another race of people flushing themselves down the collectivist toilet. The $300 mil in pre-assession and assession aid will only barely cover the costs of Croatia's having to adopt so many EU laws and regulations and should not be viewed as a valid reason to stick with the Croat politicians' plans to try and make up for Croatia's small economy by making it a part of something hundreds of times larger than itself. So much larger than Croatia that the Croats are going to find themselves marginalized and ignored. Yes, they will gain better access to EU markets, but they were already able to sell in Europe by paying the same tariffs that U.S. and Asian companies do. Having to meet EU standards will leave Croat goods and services with nothing to differentiate them from anything else produced in Europe when the Croats conduct business elsewhere . . . and little of the unique culture that got them through these past 800 years, during which scores of other societies have come and gone.
    • .  •  1 mth 22 days ago
      There goes the neighborhood.
    • flyphish  •  Soldotna, Alaska  •  1 mth 22 days ago
      The Croats might be mighty damned lonely.They might well be in a union of one at the rate things are going in the EU.
    • Joseph S  •  1 mth 22 days ago
      oh yeah, that should help things!!! bwahhh
    • Doug J  •  1 mth 22 days ago
      I can't speak of the country's wealth,but I have seen many short video's on U-tube about Croatia.It's seems like a wonderful place with layed back, easy going people.Good luck to them.
    • albertt  •  Sunnyvale, California  •  1 mth 22 days ago
      Bangladesh is waiting to join.
    • Lordh  •  Elmhurst, Illinois  •  1 mth 22 days ago
      They'll go thru another blood war to get out of the EU... the EU, aka Deutschland, wants to take over :)
    • Crackpot  •  1 mth 22 days ago
      Europe is a made-up lie by the media.
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