Friday, 01 Nov 2024

EU Admits Croatia Into the Border-Free Schengen Zone Cooperative

European Union ministers have agreed to include Croatia in the established border-free Schengen Zone, further facilitating cross-border travel between member nations.


EU Admits Croatia Into the Border-Free Schengen Zone Cooperative
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Traveling to the beautiful and alluring country of Croatia is about to get easier, as European Union (E.U.) member governments agreed on Thursday to admit the Balkan nation into the bloc's passport-free Schengen zone.

It's a watershed moment for Croatia, which joined the E.U. back in 2013, but has only just managed to convince the European Commission that it's able to effectively manage its section of the bloc's external borders, Reuters reported.

Croatia shares external borders with non-Schengen countries Serbia, and Bosnia and Herzegovina, and is also is responsible for guarding sea access. Of late, the country has bolstered its efforts to demonstrate to the E.U. that it can prevent undocumented migrants from slipping through its borders.

"Croatia is ready," European Commissioner for Home Affairs, Ylva Johansson, told a news conference after an agreement had been reached among the bloc's interior ministers. The E.U. had first recommended that Croatia be included in the Schengen area back in October 2019.

The various cooperations operating across the European Continent can become rather confusing for outsiders, as Running With Miles noted. The European Union itself currently has 27 member countries (or "states"). Under that umbrella, there's also the Eurozone agreement-a monetary confederation of 19 member states that have adopted the Euro as their official currency and sole legal tender. Croatia reportedly wishes to join the Eurozone in the future.

Then, there's the border-free Schengen area, which consists of 26 European nations (not necessarily E.U. members) that have chosen to abolish controls at their mutual borders and implement a common visa policy, thereby making international travel within the zone as hassle-free as possible.

The Schengen Agreement, which allows for unrestricted movement between member states, has enabled many Europeans to live and work across international borders, though the COVID-19 pandemic has largely interfered with those established policies over the past 21 months.

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