Prague - The way is free for Schengen borderless zone
expansion within the European Union, Portuguese Deputy Interior
Minister Jose Magalhaes told reporters in Prague Friday.
Experts had agreed in Brussels that all nine newcomers to the zone
are ready to join, and 'it is not a vague conclusion - it means each
and every state is prepared,' Magalhaes told Deutsche Presse-Agentur
dpa after a meeting with his counterparts in Prague.
While the evaluation report, to be made public in November,
includes recommendations, 'none of them implies that the states have
not done their homework,' he said.
The European Parliament was thus expected to approve the
enlargement in December and EU interior ministers would follow suite
in the same month.
Nine of the 10 countries that joined the EU in 2004 would be then
allowed to join the zone as soon as December 21, when land and sea
border controls would be scrapped. Air borders would stay put until
March 31, 2008 as planned.
Eighteen interior ministers of current and upcoming member states
of the borderless zone met in Prague Friday to debate how all
Schengen members adopt an upgraded version of the zone's information
system, one of the key requirements for the area's expansion.
All current and future Schengen members have been connected to the
system, through which since August 31 they have been sharing
information such as data on missing or wanted people.
As it became clear that waiting for a new generation of the
information system would delay the expansion, Portugal suggested
connecting the newcomers to an updated version.
'If it were not solved, our presidency would be a nightmare,'
Magalhaes, whose country currently presides over the European Union,
told dpa.
The members-to-be are the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary,
Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia. Cyprus,
which also joined in 2004, will not be joining, neither will Bulgaria
and Romania, which became EU members in 2007.
Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece,
Iceland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Spain
and Sweden belong to the current 15 members of the Schengen zone. All
current members except Norway and Iceland are European Union members.
People can travel freely within the zone from one country to
another without border controls. Trips by air, road and train are
handled as domestic trips.
The zone is named after a small town in Luxembourg where seven
European Union countries signed an initial treaty to end internal
border checkpoints and controls in June 1985.
© 2007 dpa - Deutsche Presse-Agentur
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