Brussels, 12/09/2006 (Agence Europe) - In a joint letter to the Deputy Prime Minister of Romania Bela Markó and the party leaders of the coalition government, Commissioners Olli Rehn (Enlargement) and Franco Frattini (Justice) expressed their “considerable concern” about the real desire on the part of Romanian political players to fight against high-level corruption in the country. Corruption - including in political, economic, legal and administrative areas - is one of the major problems that Romania has to resolve, if it wants to be given a positive report by the European Commission on 26 September. In their letter of 8 September, Messrs Frattini and Rehn said they were particularly “disappointed” that the draft Law to establish the national Integrity Agency, responsible for checking where ministers and MPs' assets came from, had not yet been adopted by the lower house. “The establishment of an Integrity Agency … could have had a very positive impact on the prevention and fight against high-level corruption, which was one of the commitments made by Romania during the closure of EU accession negotiations,” they wrote. In addition, amendments, proposed in the Senate, on the nomination procedure of the General Prosecutor could introduce “unnecessary instability”. “There needs to be a clear demonstration by all Romania's political actors that they support an effective and irreversible fight against high-level corruption,” the Commissioners warned in their letter.