Europe | South-eastern Europe

Knocking on heaven’s door

Balkan laggards harbour new hopes of entering the EU

Ready to launch
|PRISTINA AND TIRANA

EVER since the end of the Balkan wars in 1999, the most important question in the region has been when and how to join the European Union. Slovenia made it in 2004 and Croatia followed in 2013. For the rest, however, the goal is still far off. The prospects of Albania, Bosnia, Kosovo, Macedonia, Montenegro and Serbia—all at different stages of EU integration—have appeared stuck for some time.

But recent months brought progress, mostly unnoticed in the rest of crisis-ridden Europe. On August 25th Kosovo and Serbia signed several EU-aided agreements, including one giving Kosovo’s Serb-dominated municipalities more rights. The EU also mediated an agreement leading to new elections in Macedonia, where a political crisis had come to boiling point. An unworkable EU policy blocking Bosnia’s advancement was abandoned.

This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline "Knocking on heaven’s door"

The Great Fall of China

From the August 27th 2015 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Europe

“Our Europe can die”: Macron’s dire message to the continent

Institutions are not for ever, after all

Carbon emissions are dropping—fast—in Europe

Thanks to a price mechanism that actually works


Italy’s government is trying to influence the state-owned broadcaster

Giorgia Meloni’s supporters accuse RAI of left-wing bias