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Nazarbayev notes growing threat to CSTO stability, security

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  • Nazarbayev notes growing threat to CSTO stability, security

    Nazarbayev notes growing threat to CSTO stability, security
    By Mikhail Petrov

    ITAR-TASS News Agency
    June 18, 2004 Friday 12:22 AM Eastern Time

    ASTANA, June 18 - President of Kazakhstan Nursultan Nazarbayev
    has pointed to the "increased threat to stability and security" to
    member-countries of the Collective Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO).

    Speaking at an enlarged meeting of the CSTO summit in the Kazakh
    capital Astana on Friday he urged to "reduce to minimum the doubling
    of functions within the framework of the organisation, concentrate
    on the military-political component and intensify cooperation against
    challenges and threats of today."

    Addressing the presidents of Armenia, Belarus, Kyrgyzstan, Russia
    and Tajikistan the Kazakh leader noted that the CSTO member states
    have considerable prospects for military-technical cooperation.

    "At today's meeting we should consider priorities of our activities
    for the near-term prospect," Nazarbayev said.

    The Astana summit opened with a discussion in private held behind
    closed doors. Russian president's aide Sergei Prikhodko said
    earlier that the main subjects for discussion could be divided into
    three parts: the actual coordination of the foreign policy within
    international organisations framework, set-up of real functioning of
    structures of the CSTO itself and joint operations of its anti-aircraft
    defence systems.

    The Collective security Treaty (CST) was signed in Tashkent in 1992
    by heads of six CIS countries - Armenia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
    Russia, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. Azerbaijan, Georgia and Belarus
    joined the treaty in 1993.

    The treaty came into force for all the nine countries in April 1994
    for a term of five years. However, Azerbaijan, Georgia and Uzbekistan
    decided not to sign a protocol on the treaty's prolongation in
    April 1999.

    In 2002 the CST was reorganized into a full-fledged international
    organisation - the CSTO.

    Under the CSTO charter, its member states take joint measures to
    form within the framework of the organisation a viable system of
    collective security and create regional groups of troops, coordinate
    their efforts in the fight against international terrorism, drug
    trafficking, weapons smuggling, organised crime, illegal migration
    and other menaces to their security.
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