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Norway hails EU Nobel win, but membership not on agenda
PRIME Minister Jens Stoltenberg of host country Norway today congratulated the European Union on its Nobel Peace Prize win, but stressed his nation still had no plans to join the bloc.
"It is possible to congratulate the EU for this year's peace prize, to acknowledge the EU for its peace-creating role, and separate it from the question about Norway's relationship to the EU," Stoltenberg told reporters shortly after the award announcement.
"This peace prize does not change the situation when it comes to Norway's relationship to the EU," he said, stressing that "membership is not on the agenda."
The Nobel Committee's choice of the European Union for this year's prize for its role in securing six decades of peace and stability in Europe may come as a surprise to many since it comes at a time when the bloc is wracked by the deep eurocrisis.
But it is especially controversial in Norway, which has rejected membership in the union in two referendums, in 1972 and 1994, and where more than three quarters of the population are currently opposed to joining, according to recent polls.
Both the ruling center-left and the opposition right are divided on the matter.
Stoltenberg's Labor Party is largely in favor, but his government depends on the support of eurosceptic coalition partners.
"It is possible to congratulate the EU for this year's peace prize, to acknowledge the EU for its peace-creating role, and separate it from the question about Norway's relationship to the EU," Stoltenberg told reporters shortly after the award announcement.
"This peace prize does not change the situation when it comes to Norway's relationship to the EU," he said, stressing that "membership is not on the agenda."
The Nobel Committee's choice of the European Union for this year's prize for its role in securing six decades of peace and stability in Europe may come as a surprise to many since it comes at a time when the bloc is wracked by the deep eurocrisis.
But it is especially controversial in Norway, which has rejected membership in the union in two referendums, in 1972 and 1994, and where more than three quarters of the population are currently opposed to joining, according to recent polls.
Both the ruling center-left and the opposition right are divided on the matter.
Stoltenberg's Labor Party is largely in favor, but his government depends on the support of eurosceptic coalition partners.
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