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Germany ratifies EU constitution, hopes to boost French 'yes' lobby
BERLIN - Germany became the ninth country to ratify the EU constitution in a
move designed to help the flagging "yes" campaign in France ahead of this
weekend's referendum. Germany followed Austria, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Lithuania, Slovakia, Slovenia and Spain in approving the text. All 25 EU member states must approve the constitution before it can take effect. German political leaders have expressed grave concerns about the consequences of a "no" vote in France, which is the other half of the so-called motor of European integration. Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer told the upper house that if the constitution was rejected it would make the continent "weaker" and hinder its ability to compete in an increasingly globalised world. "The world will not wait for Europe," Fischer said. Germany did not put the constitutional charter to a popular vote. The lower house of parliament, the Bundestag, had approved it with a massive majority on May 12. Former French president Valery Giscard d'Estaing, who helped draft the constitution, made an address to the German upper house ahead of the vote in which he called on France not to derail the European project. "This is an historic event because Germany is one of Europe's founding countries and its most populous," Giscard d'Estaing said. "The day after tomorrow, I hope with all my heart that the French are going to ratify this constitution through a referendum. "Ratification by Germany and France would mark an historic step forward for the future of the constitution and for Europe." In another sign of Germany's concern over the French referendum, Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder was breaking off from planning a general election expected in September in order to visit France on Friday to urge voters to back the text. He was to address a French Socialist Party rally in the southwestern city of Toulouse. Schroeder warned France last week that it had a responsibility "not to leave the other Europeans in the lurch". Opinion polls in France showed the "no" camp had a clear lead with 48 hours to go before voting. Le Parisien newspaper said 55 percent opposed the text with 45 percent backing it. The constitution is designed to set out a new framework for an enlarged European Union which last year opened its doors to 10 new members, eight of them former Communist countries. |
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