The Dutch government plans to campaign for a Yes
in an upcoming referendum on the EU-Ukraine free-trade agreement.
Dutch prime minister Mark Rutte, who currently
holds the EU presidency, told press in Amsterdam on Thursday (7 January) the
pact is good for Europe and good for the Netherlands.
“I’ll be
out there and I’ll be explaining to people why we signed this agreement … We
are a trading nation. We live by free trade agreements and Ukraine is another
example of this,” he said.
“People who are inclined to vote No think it’s a
first step to EU membership. It has nothing to do with accession,” he added.
Rutte, who comes from the mildly eurosceptic
liberal VVD party in the ruling coalition, said the whole government backs the
Ukraine treaty.
His foreign minister, Bert Koenders, from the
pro-EU PvdA party, said it serves Dutch security interests, by helping to
stabilise the EU’s eastern neighbourhood, and that it’s “important for both our
[Dutch and Ukrainian] economies.”
“We will actively put forward what we think the
answer should be, which is Yes,” Koenders said.
The referendum, to take place on 6 April
following a petition organised by civil society, is non-binding.
If Dutch people say No, the government must
“reassess” its decision. But it’s unclear what would happen if the assessment
caused a U-turn.
The treaty was, last year, ratified by Dutch MPs
and promulgated by the Dutch King. It also entered into
force on 1 January.
Koenders noted he can’t say in advance what a
reassessment might lead to.
“If we say in advance ‘Yes, we will follow the
result’ then it would create a precedent for all referendums of this type. If
we say ‘No, we won’t’ then it would undermine the referendum law, which is a
democratic instrument,” the FM said.
MH17 factor
The Dutch public is sensitive to Ukraine due to
the MH17 air disaster in July 2014, in which hundreds of Dutch nationals died
when a Russian rocket shot down a passenger plane en route from Amsterdam to
Kuala Lumpur.
Rutte said: “We have not seen a link so far
[between MH17 and the referendum] but we’ll have to wait and see.”
Speaking more broadly on Dutch policy on Russia,
Koenders added that MH17 “is not formally, or even informally connected to the
[EU] sanctions discussion.”
Both men promised to bring the perpetrators to
justice.
Koenders said criminal investigators from the
Netherlands, Australia, Belgium, Malaysia, and Ukraine will “in the next
half-year” put forward their findings.
But it’s unknown how suspects will be put on
trial after Russia vetoed a UN-level tribunal, with Rutte saying only that
he’ll wait until the investigation ends before deciding how to proceed.
No Russian veto
The next six months will see Russia relations
tested further if Nato takes in Montenegro and if it agrees to Poland’s request
for permanent military bases.
The Netherlands is happy to let France and
Germany lead the way on EU-Russia relations. But it says Russia doesn’t have a
“veto” on Nato decisions.
Rutte noted the Montenegro decision will be
based on internal Nato talks.
Koenders said “it’s important to keep bridges
open” with Russia. But he added that “Russia doesn’t have the right to veto the
decisions of independent nations.”
“The Russian Federation is an important country.
But unfortunately, in Ukraine, it chose to unilaterally change the rules of the
game which we had agreed upon,” he said.
“We should move away from the politics of
spheres of influence and accept the sovereign decisions of independent states.”
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