Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Putin: ex-Soviet nations worried re terrorist bases in Afghanistan

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Putin: ex-Soviet nations worried re terrorist bases in Afghanistan

    Putin: ex-Soviet nations worried about terrorist bases in Afghanistan

    By VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV
    .c The Associated Press


    MOSCOW (AP) - Russian President Vladimir Putin said Thursday that
    Russia and other ex-Soviet nations are concerned about terrorist
    training bases in Afghanistan and that country's booming drug trade.

    Speaking after a meeting of leaders of six former Soviet nations, all
    members of a Russia-dominated security grouping, Putin said terrorists
    in Afghanistan enjoyed some foreign backing.

    ``We are seriously concerned about terrorists' training bases
    continuing to function on Afghan territory, some with direct
    involvement of some secret services,'' Putin said without
    elaboration. ``Afghanistan also has remained the source of increasing
    drug trafficking.''

    Members of the Collective Security Treaty Organization, which unites
    Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Belarus and Armenia, long
    have expressed their worries about drugs and instability spilling over
    from Afghanistan.

    Authorities in Uzbekistan, an ex-Soviet nation which isn't member of
    the Collective Security Treaty, said militants from Afghanistan helped
    stage May's uprising in the Uzbek city of Andijan.

    At a separate meeting of security officials from former Soviet
    nations, a senior Russian official said militants who underwent
    training in international terrorist camps in Afghanistan and Pakistan
    had used Iran and Central Asian nations for transit.

    Yuri Sapunov, the head of the anti-terrorist department at Russia's
    Federal Security Service (FSB), the main KGB successor agency, also
    said some of the militants fighting in Chechnya and other restive
    Caucasus regions in Russia's south had come from Western Europe.

    ``Channels for bringing terrorists to the North Caucasus begin in
    Western European countries and run through Turkey, Azerbaijan and
    Georgia,'' Sapunov said, according to the Interfax and ITAR-Tass news
    agencies.

    Sapunov reaffirmed Moscow's criticism of the United States and other
    Western nations for their refusal to extradite Chechen rebel
    leaders. He said FSB agents in Chechnya had killed 58 militants since
    the year's start.

    During Thursday's meeting of the Collective Security Treaty, its
    members signed an agreement to foster cooperation in training military
    personnel and set up a commission intended to promote closer ties
    between their defense industries.

    Putin said member states also were planning to develop a joint air
    defense system and build up their collective rapid reaction forces.
    These forces could be used for peacekeeping operations, Putin said.

    Putin said after the talks that the group plans to establish contacts
    with NATO.



    06/23/05 10:16 EDT
Working...
X