Sorry, ichkeria and jomifl, but it will come as no surprise to learn that I’m with baz on this one.
There are two strands to my thoughts. Firstly that I’m puzzled why the Ukrainians are so eager to become part of yet another oppressive empire which will stifle their ambition, individuality and democracy. It may well be that the EU is slightly less bad than the former USSR, but that’s rather like saying it is preferable to have your leg chopped off slightly below the knee instead of just above it.
But secondly (and more importantly as far as I’m concerned) should citizens of the current EU nations really want to see the bloc expanded to encompass a nation that is so steeped in corruption that the judiciary is as susceptible to bribery as suggested? There is nothing to stop the UK entering into trading agreements with the Ukraine (well, there wouldn’t be but for our membership of the EU). But is it really our responsibility as part of the EU to see their corruption cured just so they can join the club. In any case, corruption in high places within the EU (accounts not signed off by the auditors for at least fourteen years) leads me to believe that the EU is the very last organisation the Ukrainians should turn to for advice on such issues.
The EU is a corrupt, anti-democratic organisation whose long term aim is to see the abolition of individual nation states. In this respect it is identical to the former USSR. It has achieved little of benefit to the UK that the UK alone could not have achieved without it. It has imposed huge financial and administrative burdens on, particularly, its more prosperous nations and is a wealth redistribution machine shifting money to less well off members. (Incidentally, jomifl, you might like to ask your Lithuanian friends - and their Belarussian neighbours - quite how their “freedom” has been enhanced by their membership of the EU over how it would have been had they simply broken away from the USSR and remained independednt). It is struggling economically mainly because of its ridiculously flawed single currency which it refuses to abandon and the wild disparities in the economies of its members which will never converge whilst they remain individual nations (hence its long term ambition of a federal state). The last thing it needs is to recruit further members with vastly differing economies (GDP per capita in the Ukraine is less than 25% of that of the UK, average salaries £280 per month) and, shall we be kind and say, a less than satisfactory government and judiciary.
There! I think that's made my position quite clear !!