Serbia, Albania, N. Macedonia agree to passport-free travel

Citizens of those countries will be able to travel freely between the countries by 2021. Leaders hope it will boost commerce and living standards.

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Marko Djurica/Reuters
Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic, pictured here attending a military graduation ceremony in Belgrade, told a joint news conference Oct. 10, 2019 that passport-free travel between Serbia, Albania, and North Macedonia will begin in 2021.

The leaders of Albania, North Macedonia, and Serbia agreed on Thursday to allow passport-free travel for their citizens by 2021 and a speedier cross-border flow of goods to boost regional economic development.

Six Western Balkan countries – Albania, Bosnia, Kosovo, Montenegro, Macedonia, and Serbia – hope to join the European Union, but their accession has been slowed down by Brexit and other factors. Their mutual relations are also burdened by the legacy of the bloody wars of the 1990s in the Balkans.

"We aim to create conditions for people to use only national identification cards for crossing the borders [of the three countries] by end-2021," Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić told a joint news conference with the prime ministers of Albania and North Macedonia.

The declaration is "meant for the benefit of the people who deserve a better future, higher living standards, and a lower unemployment rate," he added.

Their move is not a specific requirement of the EU but comes at a time when there is growing resistance within the bloc to further enlargement.

"We are all on an European path, but we have agreed to decide our own fate," Mr. Vučić said.

Diplomatic sources told Reuters on Thursday that France was opposed to launching membership negotiations with North Macedonia and Albania for now because the bloc faced too many other challenges.

Of the six Western Balkan countries, Serbia and Montenegro are already negotiating EU membership. Albania and North Macedonia are seeking candidate status, while Bosnia and Kosovo are the furthest behind in the process.

All six countries must improve the rule of law and the business climate and clamp down on corruption and organized crime before joining the EU.

Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama said continued tensions, such as those between Serbia and Kosovo, should not discourage regional leaders from pursuing such initiatives as the passport agreement that would bring benefits to all.

"The year 2021 is our deadline to make sure this region is open," Mr. Rama said.

Mr. Vučić said the next meeting is scheduled for Nov. 10 at the Ohrid lake resort in North Macedonia and that other Western Balkan countries would be invited to join.

This story was reported by Reuters. Aleksandar Vasovic contributed.

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