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Bill on new autonomies of Russian Federation blackballed

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  • Bill on new autonomies of Russian Federation blackballed

    Bill on new autonomies of Russian Federation blackballed

    11.03.2005, 15.56

    MOSCOW, March 11 (Itar-Tass) - The Russian State Duma turned down on
    Friday the proposed facilitated procedure for the inclusion in the
    Russian Federation, as its new subjects, of the autonomies of the
    former Union republics of the USSR.

    The majority of MPs were of the opinion that such a document was apt
    to jeopardise the territorial integrity of Russia and to give
    â~@~the autonomies pseudo-sovereigntyâ~@~].

    The parliamentarians blackballed the first reading of the amendments
    to the constitutional law on the procedure of admitting new subjects
    to the Russian Federation or forming them within it, which were
    designed to facilitate this procedure for the autonomies of the
    former Union republics of the USSR, the status of which is still
    undetermined. Ninety-one Duma members backed the bill, while 300
    votes were needed to approve it.

    The bill was masterminded by the â~@~Rodinaâ~@~] faction, which
    moved to facilitate the procedure of including new autonomies in the
    Russian Federation â~@~on the basis of the expressed will of their
    population, endorsed by means of a nation-wide referendumâ~@~]. The
    two houses of the Russian parliament were to be vested with the right
    to submit to the president recommendations on the new subjects of the
    Federation.

    The authors of the bill noted that â~@~in view of the lately
    increasing attempts of some states, namely the former Soviet
    republics of Georgia, Azerbaijan and Moldova, to extend their
    sovereignty to the territories of the unrecognised republics of
    Abkhazia, Adzharia, South Ossetia, Nagorny-Karabakh and the Dniester
    Moldovan Republic, it is particularly timely today to assess the
    legality and juridical validity of such claimsâ~@~].

    â~@~This problem is aggravated by the fact that the governments of
    the listed countries often accuse Russia of backing the
    â~@~Xseparatismâ~@~Y of those unrecognised republics,â~@~] the MPs
    noted.

    However, the parliamentary majority refused to back the concept of
    the bill. Yuri Konev, who heads the corresponding committee of the
    State Duma, stated that approval of this document would jeopardise
    the territorial integrity of Russia and would give â~@~the
    autonomies pseudo-sovereigntyâ~@~]. â~@~The document contradicts the
    international law,â~@~] he stressed.






    --Boundary_(ID_QBGA/JH4J5h81LGlwZ4vMQ)--
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