RFE
05 May 2026, 15:38 GMT+10
Welcome to Wider Europe, RFE/RL's newsletter focusing on the key issues concerning the European Union, NATO, and other institutions and their relationships with the Western Balkans and Europe's Eastern neighborhoods.
I'm RFE/RL Europe Editor Rikard Jozwiak, and this week I am drilling down on two issues: Montenegro edging closer to the European Union; and more sanctions on Russians for the deportation of Ukrainian children.
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Wider Europe Briefing: Montenegro Edging Closer To The EU
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What You Need To Know:EU ambassadors gave a green light to both a 90 billion-euro ($106 billion) loan to Ukraine and the latest round of sanctions on Russia, but another decision went largely unnoticed: the creation of a working group to draft Montenegros EU accession treaty.
While creating such a group in the Council of Ministers is mainly a technical matter and a rather small step in the grand scheme of EU enlargement policy, its symbolic value runs deep.
This is confirmation of a political decision of the member states that Montenegro will be a future member state," one senior European diplomat told RFE/RL under the condition of anonymity.
"Once you decide to start work on drafting the accession treaty then there are no doubts any longer regarding the end result.
Deep Background:It is now, in other words, not a question of whether Montenegro will join the club, but how fast it gets there.
The Adriatic nation has said it aims to become the 28th EU member state by 2028, a lofty goal if one looks at the last addition to the bloc, Croatia in July 2013.
Croatias working group was set up in December 2009, when it had closed 28 out of the 33 accession chapters covering a broad swath of policy fields a candidate country needs to make sure are aligned with those of the bloc.
Montenegro has currently closed just 14 but hopes to finish the rest by the end of this year. Few in Brussels think this is possible given that some of the toughest issues, involving justice, home affairs, food safety, and competition policy remain to be solved.
And six months is probably not sufficient to solve everything. The working group will truly kick into gear once all the chapters are closed.
The one created for Montenegro hasnt been met yet but will soonish, according to an EU diplomat with insights into the matter who cannot speak on the record.
Once all -- or nearly all -- chapters are closed, the group will become very busy. It is then that the final touches and legal wrangling will begin with nearly daily meetings. For Croatia, that period took about five months of fine-tuning the text.
Drilling Down
What You Need To Know:The EU is preparing more sanctions on people and entities in Russia and Russian-occupied areas of Ukraine that the bloc deems responsible for the illegal deportation and so-called reeducation efforts of Ukrainian children.
In a sanctions proposal seen by RFE/RL, the EU calls the activities by Moscow grave breaches of international law and a violation of the fundamental rights of the child with the aim to erase Ukrainian identity and undermine the preservation of its future generations.
Over the last three years, the EU blacklisted several organizations and people involved in these deportations and, on May 6, EU ambassadors are set to green-light more sanctions on over a dozen new names.
Deep Background:One of the proposed entities for sanctions is the Childrens Center Smena which is linked to the Russian Education Ministry.
According to the text, the center hosts Ukrainian minors forcibly transferred from occupied territories, where they are subject to ideological indoctrination, Russification, and militarized-style education.
Another entity is the Avangard Military Camp, which the EU says sends children for political indoctrination and activities consistent with militarized and cadet-style education frameworks, such as military training and discipline.
Two other organizations, based in the Russian-occupied Ukrainian peninsula of Crimea, are also mentioned as hubs for reeducation, ideological indoctrination, and militarization of children.
Russian officials deny illegally taking Ukrainian children from their country, instead portraying their involvement as a humanitarian gesture -- sheltering, feeding, or protecting minors from the war -- or as a necessity due to the breakdown of services in regions of Ukraine because of the conflict, now in its fifth year.
Drilling Down
One interesting presentation will happen in the European Parliament in Brussels on May 6 when the mayor of the Ukrainian city of Mariupol, Vadym Boychenko, addresses the chambers regional affairs committee.
The city by the Sea of Azov fell to Russian forces almost four years ago and has remained Kremlin-controlled ever since. Boychenko has been one of the strongest voices regarding the citys destruction and future fate.
That's all for this week! Feel free to reach out to me on any of these issues on X @RikardJozwiak, or on e-mail [email protected].
Until next time,
Rikard Jozwiak
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Wider Europe Briefing: Montenegro Edging Closer To The EU
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