No, when you're a Russian physician, you are not allowed to practice medicine in the EU.
No it is not.
No - Inuit leaders have repeatedly informed EU Commissioners that as the Inuit sell seal pelts to open fur auctions they suffer the same market price decline due to the EU ban as non-Inuit sealers
No. The present (western orientated) government wants EU membership in the future but the opposition parties (many of which are more Russian orientated) are against EU membership. At present corruption and income levels are far below even the EU's poorest countries (Romania and Bulgaria) but maybe in 10 years time EU membership will be possible.
As with any alliance, there are certain requirements that EU member states are required to abide by; but in general the advantages of EU membership substantially outweigh any costs.
Malta is only a member of EU; any special role.
No, Uzbekistan is not a member of the EU, nor is it under consideration for EU membership at any future time.
The European Union makes the national language from each nation member an official language of the EU. For example, English, French, German, Italian, Danish, Swedish, Spanish, Portuguese, Greek, etc. are all official languages of the EU. The EU does not recognize languages outside of the EU or on a minority scale within the EU, such as Russian, Turkish, Chinese, Norwegian, etc.
"Can a non-EU citizen travel to any EU countries with any EU country residence permit?'' Anyone with a Swiss residence permit can travel freely throughout the Schengen Area, which is most, but not all, of the EU. You may only travel as a tourist, if you want to live permanently or work in another country and are not an EU citizen then you will need a permit from that country.
Pretty good my friend.
The EU is a complex system. One of its goals is to ensure that the EU lasts, because the EU is a way to preserve stability in Europe. All of its nations value that goal. The EU as such was formed 15 years ago. All these countries were individual states formerly, and still have a lot of autonomy inside the EU, because this is what makes the EU so stable. The nations of Europe like to have national states, and they like their differences to be noted. If these legal systems merge during time, than be it so. A sudden change would not be helpful to any member or the EU as a system, since it would cause friction.
No. A Communist country would not fit in at all and would not be admitted to the EU.
Any power: Romania is now only a colony of EU and also US.