The minority ruling Dutch Christian Democrats will reject Romania and Bulgaria's EU entry bid in a parliamentary vote next week to keep pressure on the two for more reforms, the CDA party said on Wednesday according to Reuters. It was not clear yet whether other parties would join the CDA, which has 44 seats in the 150-strong Dutch parliament, to form a majority vote next Tuesday against the two Balkan neighbours' membership. A rejection of the treaty from one EU member state would block the two countries' accession unless that EU state changed its mind, Dutch government officials said. Parliaments of all 25 EU members have to ratify the treaty, which they signed last April, for the two to be able to join. Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende's CDA said the two Balkan neighbours, and Romania in particular, had not done enough to tackle corruption and an ineffective justice system. "We have decided to vote against the treaty," CDA spokesman Jan Jacob van Dijk told Reuters. "The CDA party is principally in favour of Bulgaria and Romania joining the EU... But they have to fulfil some criteria, and one of them is a well-functioning judicial system. But it is as corrupt as possible in Romania," said Van Dijk. --More 23 22 Local Time 20 22 GMT