Croatian Foreign Minister Jandrokovic and his Slovene Counterpart Rupel Meet in Munich
Zagreb, February 8 (CP) – The Croatian Foreign Minister Gordan Jandrokovic and his Slovene opposite number Dimitrij Rupel met at the fringes of the Munich Conference on Security Policy on Saturday, both professing the need for further bilateral talks on unresolved issues.
The two have described this first meeting as an important step towards this goal.
Rupel expressed hope that this marks the start of a new dynamic being introduced to the relations between the two countries and also expressed full support for Croatia’s access to the EU.
Minister Jandrokovic stressed that both sides were ready to resolve the issue of the Protected Ecology and Fisheries Belt (ZERP) in the Adriatic.
The relations between Croatia and Slovenia have been strained lately due to Croatia implementing ZERP against EU countries and Slovenia’s using its leverage as EU member to block certain chapters of Croatia’s EU accession negotiations
News Info: News in Politics, Tagged: Jandrokovic
Previous News: Paedophile Caught Looking at Child Pornography in a Zagreb Internet Café Arrested »
Next News: Croatian Government Claims Interview with PM Sanader Is a Fake; Paper Issues Apology »
Latest Croatia News
- Body Found in the Sea Beneath the Historic Dubrovnik Walls Might Be that of Young Australian
- No New Clues in the Brutal Murder of Zagorec Solicitor’s Daughter
- Croatian Minister Roncevic To Face Questioning by Anti-corruption Agency over Truck Procurement
- Pula and Belgrade To Be Linked by Serbian Jat Airlines during Summer
- Protected Witness Testifies in the Gotovina, Cermak and Markac ICTY Trial
- The Croatian Intelligence Agency Launches Website
- Zagreb Pride March To Be Held for the Seventh Time
- Croatian Football Association Fined €60,000 for Croatian Supporters’ Inappropriate Conduct
- Zagreb: Construction Worker Dead after Metal Tube Falls on His Head
- Eurobarometer: A Third of Croats Believe EU Membership To Be Positive, but a Quarter See it as Bad for Croatia