ZAGREB, 15 Nov 2021 - Due to their distrust of politicians, European citizens will ask to participate directly in future decision-making in the European Parliament, a Croatian citizen taking part in an online panel debate on democracy in the EU on Sunday said.
Faced with a drop in citizens' trust, the European Parliament, the European Commission, and the Council of the EU in September and October invited 800 randomly selected EU citizens to discuss topics important for the 27-member bloc in the European Parliament in Strasbourg.
A group of 200 citizens discussing European democracy, rule of law, and security gathered again from Friday to Sunday, but this time at an online panel, to formulate a proposal to be put forward to European institutions early next year.
"We will propose that citizens rather than professional politicians sit in the European Parliament. People elected directly by citizens," said 67-year-old Croatian Vinko Sebešić, who took part in the panel.
EU citizens want a legislative framework for the introduction of direct democracy in the European Parliament and possibly other institutions as well.
"That is necessary due to the public's distrust of politicians. That is the future of democracy," he added.
The 200 citizens will get together again from 10 to 12 December in Florence where they will finetune the existing text and formulate a document to be sent to EU institutions for consideration.
The EP is the only EU institution elected directly by EU citizens, and based on Article 17 of the EU Treaty, it elects the European Commission President and confirms other EC members following a proposal by the European Council.
Trust in that process, however, was undermined also during the election of incumbent EC President Ursula von der Leyen, who was appointed even though the lead candidate of the winning group in European elections, the European People's Party (EPP), was Manfred Weber.
It had been expected that as the EPP's lead candidate, Weber would be nominated for EC President, however, Von der Leyen was eventually nominated in line with an agreement between EU countries' leaders. The subsequent vote by the EP only confirmed the European Council's choice even though many EP members had said that they would insist on the principle that the nominee for EC President should be the lead candidate.
Ultimately, each of those institutions is a result of citizens' choice, either direct or indirect.
European Democracy and Demography Commissioner Dubravka Šuica last month promised that the EC would take into account citizens' proposals when defining its policies after June 2022.
European citizens attending panel discussions in Strasbourg also objected against their treatment by politicians during a plenary session of the Conference on the Future of Europe, held in the EP in October, claiming that they had been invited to present their proposals but politicians did not hear them out.
EP member Guy Verhofstadt, one of the organizers of the meeting with citizens, said that at the next session in Strasbourg, set for December, there would be more time for politicians to hear citizens out after they formulate their proposals in greater detail.
Šuica and Verhofstadt have said that the Conference on the Future of Europe, a set of discussions involving EU citizens, is a unique project on the global scale, aimed at involving citizens in decision-making processes. It includes a digital platform where citizens and their groups from all EU countries can leave their comments.
Many, however, wonder if this is really about the inclusion of citizens or about "simulating democracy".
"Citizens are rising against the oligarchy that uses representative democracy only as a fig leaf for the real power balance in European societies," says political scientist Anđelko Milardović.
"Demands for introducing direct democracy have been growing louder as a response to the crisis of representative democracy," he said.
Around 70% of EU citizens polled in August said they were not happy with the way the EU currently functions, shows a survey by the Ipsos pollster.
Next weekend, a new online panel will be held, to be attended by another 200 EU citizens who were among those who gathered in Strasbourg in October.
"We, too, will demand to take part in decision-making and follow the process in the future so that Croatian politicians cannot tell us that something is demanded by Brussels and we do not know for sure if that is so and why that is so," said Croatian Dragan Volarević, who will participate in the panel.
Political scientist Milardović believes one way out could be a hybrid model of democracy - a combination of direct, representative democracy and democracy supervised by civil society.
The result would be greater political participation by citizens and control over the political oligarchy now in power, he says.
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ZAGREB, 23 Oct, 2021 - EU citizens want illegal migrants arriving at EU borders to be treated more humanely, and on Saturday they called in the European Parliament on politicians to really help people in migrants' countries of origin to reduce their influx.
The European Parliament on Saturday started a plenary at which 80 EU citizens were presenting conclusions of discussions on different topics held by 800 randomly chosen citizens in September and October.
"Citizens are worried about illegal migrations so our working group discussed that topic more than labour migration between the member states," Croatian pensioner Dajana Milinković said in a public address.
Migrations should be destigmatised, human rights respected
Milinković was speaking on behalf of 200 European citizens who discussed the topic of migrations and the EU in the world. Participating in the discussions was another Croatian pensioner, Dragan Volarević from Zadar, who was also presenting conclusions of that citizens' working group on Saturday.
"One should tackle the real causes of migrations and find ways and funds to help people stay in their countries of origin, by helping them financially and otherwise," Milinković added.
She advocated legal migrations.
"There will be less illegal migration if we establish good programmes of legal migration. That is what the EU lacks with regard to 'third world' countries," she said.
Citizens across the EU feel that they have no influence on decision-making processes, which is why euro-skepticism has been on the rise so the three main EU institutions - the European Commission, the Council of the EU and the European Parliament - have launched a series of discussions called the Conference on the Future of Europe.
"Citizens have asked to be more involved instead of just being called to go to the polls every five years, so this is our answer to their wish," European Commissioner for Democracy and Demography Dubravka Šuica said on Saturday.
Randomly chosen citizens who were invited in October to discuss migrations and the EU in the world have told politicians that they do not want violence against migrants such as that recorded on the Croatian border.
"Migrants' human rights need to be respected. They are humans too and we need to respect them," said Milinković, who comes from the northern Adriatic town of Umag.
Her speech in the European Parliament was welcomed by a round of loud applause.
Earlier this month, media broadcast footage of masked Croatian police officers clubbing migrants who had tried to enter Croatia from Bosnia and Herzegovina through a forest.
Wishing to lead the country into the Schengen area of passport-free movement, the Croatian government has been trying to convince the European Commission that it is capable of protecting the joint border. Similar reports of brutality by Croatian police have been arriving for months.
The Greek and Romanian governments have also been criticised in recent months over police conduct towards migrants.
"Migrations need to be destigmatised. They should be accepted as a fact," Milinković said.
"European countries need voluntary, legal migrants. That is why they need to be provided with better education in the countries they come from," she said.
Croatia not participating in refugee scholarship programme
Officials from the foreign ministries of 42 countries-members of the Union for the Mediterranean met in Barcelona this past Thursday to discuss the inclusion of refugees in the recipient-countries' education systems.
The talks focused on a project as part of which 300 refugees, mostly from Syria, will be granted university scholarships.
The three-year project so far has been joined by 10 of the 42 countries of the Union for the Mediterranean but Croatia is not among them.
A spokesperson for the Union has said that the aim is for as many countries as possible to join in and to extend the project.
A Croatian government official, however, told Hina: "That's it as far as the project is concerned. Those who wanted to participate have joined in."
Involved in the project are currently Poland, Italy, Spain, France, Portugal, Turkey, Egypt, Lebanon, Jordan and Morocco. The initiative for the project was launched by Portugal where refugees staying there have already enrolled at universities.
The funds for the education of refugees would be raised through donations by foundations, solidary taxation of the academic community, and risk capital fund investments in talented students.
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As many third country nationals without legal residence here struggle to find a way to get into Croatia securely without being sent back home, EU citizens are still finding it relatively easy.
As Novac writes on the 3rd of July, 2020, the Government of the Republic of Slovenia adopted a decision on the classification of countries into three categories, following which different levels of epidemiological measures are applied. Croatia was briefly on the green list, but has since been moved to the yellow list, which means that entry into Slovenia without quarantine is allowed to all Slovenian citizens, foreigners with permanent or temporary residence in Slovenia, EU citizens or and citizens of Schengen member states, with the exception of Sweden and Portugal.
For third-country nationals who don't hold temporart or permanent residence in Slovenia, a fourteen-day quarantine is mandatory upon entry into Slovenia. Guests and tourists who come to Croatia from other EU countries and on their way back from Croatia only pass through Slovenia can return to their homes without any restrictions.
"The epidemiological picture on the Croatian coast is still among the best in the Mediterranean, and so far, since the beginning of the pandemic, there has been no case of infection of tourists staying in commercial accommodation facilities, which confirms the work of the health system, civil protection and the security level in facilities and tourist companies is at the highest level. All guests who come to Croatia are safe and welcome,'' said Veljko Ostojic, director of the Croatian Tourism Association.
All citizens of the Republic of Slovenia who go to Croatia can return home without any problems with proof of residence in Croatia, but that isn't the case for neighbouring Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Northern Macedonia or Kosovo, ie, for the countries on the "red list". They can do this if they show proof of accommodation, proof of ownership of a property or a vessel, as well as proof of payment of any accompanying fees. Additionally, all guests from other European countries will not have any problems passing through Slovenia on their way home.
According to the Croatian National Tourist Board, over 1.7 million tourists have visited Croatia since the beginning of the year, with over 8.7 million overnight stays having been realised.
In order to prevent crowds on the border with Croatia, all guests are advised to fill out the form available on entercroatia.mup.hr before setting off on their journeys.
As of yesterday, at the road border crossings Bregana, Macelj, Rupa and Plovanija, there are special lanes for guests who have filled in and submitted the Enter Croatia form before arrival.
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