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  • CSTO countries discuss collective security in Kazakh capital

    CSTO countries discuss collective security in Kazakh capital

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

    ASTANA, June 18 -- Leaders of the Collective Security Treaty
    Organisation (CSTO) member states at their summit here on Friday
    discussed collective measures of security building and CSTO
    strengthening.

    Presidents of Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia and
    Tajikistan, as well as the CSTO Secretary General, Nikolai Bordyuzha
    began a round-table discussion in a narrow format.

    Journalists attended only the summit's opening ceremony and after
    that the session was continued behind closed doors.

    Russian president's aide Sergei Prikhodko said earlier that the leaders
    of the six countries would discuss in greater detail the situation
    in the Middle East, including, possibly, the U.S. Greater Middle
    East initiative, proposed at the recent Group of Eight (G8) summit,
    the situation in Afghanistan, interaction in fighting terrorism,
    and in combating drugs trafficking.

    In this connection, Putin will inform the other presidents of the
    results of the G8 summit. The Heads of State will touch upon matters
    concerning the CSTO cooperation with other organisations, the United
    Nations and the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe,
    in particular.

    Prikhodko mentioned the following three most important items on the
    agenda of the CSTO summit: a real coordination of foreign policies
    within the framework of international organisations, the establishment
    of real functioning of the structures of the CSTO itself and joint
    actions of air defence systems.

    Heads of six CIS countries - Armenia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia,
    Tajikistan and Uzbekistan signed the Collective Security Treaty in
    Tashkent in 1992. Azerbaijan, Georgia and Belarus joined the treaty
    in 1993.

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

    In 2002, the treaty was transformed into a valid international
    organisation-CSTO.

    The CSTO regulation said the member-countries take joint actions to
    form an efficient collective security system within the framework of
    the Organisation, create regional military groupings and coordinate
    their efforts in fighting international terrorism, drug and arms
    trafficking, organised crime, illegal migration and other threats.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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