INA- sources
Romania and Bulgaria have struck an agreement with Austria to partially join Europe's borderless Schengen travel zone by March 2024, Bucharest and Sofia have confirmed.
The political agreement will allow Romania and Bulgaria to join the Schengen zone by air and sea only, with further negotiations to follow on land borders, the Romanian interior ministry said Wednesday.
Austria had been blocking both countries' accession to Schengen over concerns it could lead to an influx in irregular migrant arrivals in Europe via the Turkish and Western Balkan routes.
There are 27 countries currently in the Schengen area, 23 of them European Union states, and over 423 million citizens. Romania and Bulgaria had been seeking access for more than a decade.
Welcoming the agreement on social media platform Facebook, Romanian Prime Minister Marcel Ciolacu said: "After thirteen years, Romania will finally join Schengen - we have a political agreement."
"As of next March, Romanians can benefit from the advantages of the Schengen area by air and sea," he added. "I am also convinced that in 2024 we will close negotiations on land borders."
Bulgarian Prime Minister Nikolay Denkov confirmed on Thursday that an agreement was reached after "complicated negotiations."
"After 12 years without much progress on Schengen, today we can congratulate ourselves on this indisputable success of Bulgaria," Denkov said.
The European Commission had considered both countries to be ready for Schengen accession since 2011, but EU states had blocked an agreement over fears regarding the rule of law and an increase in migration.