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European Jewish body meets EU top officials in Brussels
Updated: 26/Jun/2008 13:22
Moshe Kantor (L), president of the European Jewish Congress, during a recent meeting in Ljubljana with Slovenian Prime Minister Janez Jansa who heads the EU Council.
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BRUSSELS (EJP)---A delegation of the European Jewish Congress (EJC) meets Monday and Tuesday in Brussels with EU top officials to discuss issues of concern to the European and Jewish Community.

The delegation, to be headed by EJC President Moshe Kantor, will voice its support for legislation to stiffen penalties for hate crimes, xenophobia and anti-Semitism among European nations.

European responses to the Iranian nuclear threat and the promotion of EU's strategic, political and diplomatic relations with Israel will also be discussed.

The EJC delegation will meet Monday and Tuesday with European Parliament Hans-Gert Poettering, EU’s foreign policy chief Javier Solana, External Relations European Commissioner Benita Ferrero-Waldner and European Commisioner in charge of justice, freedom and security, Jacques Barrot.

The EJC leadership is strongly involved in the recent International Luxembourg Forum on Preventing Nuclear Catastrophe and among the topics for discussion will be the new EU sanctions on Iran.

The European Union approved Monday new sanctions against Iran, including freezing assets of the country's biggest bank, Melli. It also listed 20 Iranian companies and 15 individuals linked to Tehran's nuclear program who will be affected by the new sanctions imposed over Tehran's nuclear defiance.

EJC President, Moshe Kantor has called on the EU to speed implementation of sanctions against business interests cooperating with Iran's nuclear program.

"If Iran, the center of world terror today, goes nuclear, threats of terrorist attacks in Europe will make peaceful life here unthinkable,” he said.

“A nuclear Iran will accelerate the race for nuclear weapons among its neighbors and further destabilize world peace,” according to Kantor.

Based in Paris, the European Jewish Congress is a representative body for Jewish communities across Europe.

Around 2,5 million Jews live today in Europe.

 



 
Yossi Lempkowicz
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