Opponents of
EU treaty accused of being 'terrorists'
UK Daily Express | June 18, 2007
By
Julia
Hartley-Brewer
Eurosceptics have
been branded "terrorists" just days before Tony Blair prepares to
fly to Brussels to smuggle in the new EU constitution by the back
door.
Critics of the EU’s
secret plans to bring back the failed European constitution by
stealth at this week’s summit were blasted by the Italian President,
Giorgio Napolitano.
The Italian head of
state told a news conference in Siena last week that "those who are
anti EU are terrorists".
And he attacked
eurosceptics who warn that the promised new EU treaty will go too
far in eroding the powers of member states, saying: "It is
psychological terrorism to suggest the spectre of a European
superstate."
His comments
emerged as EU foreign ministers gather in Luxembourg today to
negotiate the new treaty to replace the failed EU constitution,
ahead of a summit of EU leaders in Brussels on Thursday.
Ahead of what will
be his last major political event before he hands over to Gordon
Brown, Mr Blair has been forced to deny widespread claims that he
will seek to sign up to a new treaty which will revive the key
planks of the constitution, which was doomed after it was rejected
by French and Dutch voters in referendums in 2005.
Downing Street
issued a list of Britain’s "red line" issues where Mr Blair will
refuse to hand over powers to Brussels, such as the veto on criminal
justice and labour law and Britain’s seat on the UN security
council, but refused to offer British voters a referendum on the
treaty.
But critics say Mr
Blair is, like most other EU leaders, determined to bring the failed
EU constitution in by the back door by simply renaming the document
as an "amending treaty" and slimming down its original 500 pages.
Campaigners for
national referendums on the proposed treaty were left outraged when
President Napolitano spoke out last Monday alongside the German
President, Horst Kohler, who nodded in agreement at his comments.
President Kohler
also described the tactics of eurosceptics as "populistic, demagogic
campaigning".
The words of the
two men were seen by many in their home countries as a thinly veiled
attempt to link euroscepticism with the demagoguery and populism of
the fascist regimes of Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini.
Mr Blair’s claim
that the new treaty is not simply a re-hash of the rejected
constitution were dismissed by eurosceptic campaigners, who pointed
to the statements of other European politicians in recent weeks.
German Chancellor
Angela Merkel, in a letter to fellow leaders, revealed last wek that
most countries want to keep the "substance" of the constitution.
And former French
president Valéry Giscard d’Estaing, a key architect of the EU
constitution, said last week: "I am strongly opposed to a mutilated
treaty. The European Council must establish a clear road map and a
clear mandate to achieve the process for the ratification of the
constitutional treaty."
Meanwhile, German
Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier recently said "closed-door
negotiations among the 27 EU governments were making progress in
deciding on what to do with the constitution", adding: "Everyone
wants to push this forward."
UKIP leader, Nigel
Farage MEP, said: "This treaty is the constitution by another name.
The agenda has always been to sneak it in under another guise. It is
a deliberate and deceitful attempt to prevent free and fair
referendums not just in Britain but all European countries.
"It will have
enormous adverse implications for Britain, yet it is just being
bulldozed through. Blair will sign away our future - just days
before he leaves No 10 - and his legacy will be a hand grenade with
the pin pulled out."
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