* EU to provide 20 million euros to help IDPs
* EU executive to ask member states to provide additional 45 million euros
* EU, Pakistan reaffirm commitment to cooperate in terror fight
* EU executive to ask member states to provide additional 45 million euros
* EU, Pakistan reaffirm commitment to cooperate in terror fight
BRUSSELS: The European Union pledged aid on Wednesday to internally displaced Pakistanis from Swat, but denied Islamabad the trade breaks it says will help win the struggle.
At the first EU-Pakistan summit, the European Commission said it would provide 20 million euros ($27.72 million) to help people from the Swat valley, and would ask EU states to provide a further 45 million euros ($62.37 million) from a reserve fund.
But a push by some EU states to offer Pakistan significant trade concessions was blocked by others concerned about the effect on their domestic industries.
A joint EU-Pakistan statement showed that while the EU offered the prospect of a long-term free-trade agreement, there would be no immediate trade incentives such as eliminating tariffs on Pakistani imports.
I am looking for memorandums of understanding, not IOUs, and I intend to get them, said President Asif Ali Zardari ahead of the meeting, adding that trade concessions were more important than aid. But he said later he was pleased with the support Pakistan was getting from Europe and elsewhere.
European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said Islamabad needed measures to diversify exports and attract investment, and Brussels would be very pragmatic in looking at options, including preferential access schemes.
We are ready to work with Pakistani authorities to find some concrete ways ... to achieve greater access to our market, he told the news conference. But he stressed that some steps needed backing of all members of the World Trade Organisation, which did not seem likely.
The joint statement also said the EU would step up relations with Pakistan in development, education, security, counter-terrorism, trade and other areas.
The EU will also provide Pakistan counter-terrorism help by sharing expertise in law enforcement and criminal justice. The joint statement stressed the need to improve the capabilities of Pakistani police.
Pakistan and the EU also agreed to start a regular Pakistan-EU Counter-Terrorism dialogue.