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Putin tells CIS to learn from war and fend off 'extremism'

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  • Putin tells CIS to learn from war and fend off 'extremism'

    Putin tells CIS to learn from war and fend off 'extremism'

    Agence France Presse -- English
    May 8, 2005 Sunday 5:30 PM GMT

    MOSCOW May 8 -- Russia's President Vladimir Putin called Sunday on
    heads of the CIS bloc of former Soviet republics to remember the
    lessons of World War II and be vigilant in combating terror and
    extremist threats.

    "Nazism, extremism and terrorism -- these are threats that all feed
    from the same ideological trough... awful threats that we are simply
    obliged to protect our unique peaceful commonwealth of civilizations
    from," Putin said as he opened an informal CIS summit here.

    Putin was addressing the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) -- a
    Russian-led gathering of 12 ex-Soviet states -- on the eve of showpiece
    commemorations of the end of World War II in Europe 60 years ago.

    Amid growing fissures within the CIS, he said the group should adopt
    a "declaration of humanitarian cooperation," reaffirming cooperation
    in the humanitarian, cultural and scientific spheres.

    Despite widespread criticism that the CIS has grown ineffective since
    it was created on the ruins of the Soviet Union, there was guarded
    optimism from Kyrgyzstan's interim President Kurmanbek Bakiyev --
    swept to power in a March uprising -- that the bloc could shape up.

    "The decisions reached in recent years didn't bring the desired
    results, above all on an economic level -- it's necessary to strengthen
    cooperation on the economic level," Bakiyev told journalists.

    Others dissented however, underscoring internal fissures in the loose
    grouping of nations.

    Georgia's President Mikhail Saakashvili is refusing to attend due to
    the continued presence of two Russian military bases on his country's
    territory.

    Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev also stayed away saying he could
    not sit at the same table with Armenian president Robert Kocharyan
    on the anniversary of an occupation of Azeri territory by neighboring
    Armenia.

    Beyond the CIS meeting however a flurry of other bilateral talks
    were due, involving both CIS leaders and others among the nearly 60
    world leaders arriving for Monday's massive military and veterans'
    parade on Red Square.

    Turkmenistan's reclusive President Saparmurat Niyazov made a rare
    overseas appearance, planning talks with Ukraine and Russia's leaders
    on enhancing Turkmen natural gas supplies to Ukraine.

    Moscow is on a high state of alert ahead of Monday's wartime
    commemorations, overshadowed by arguments over the Soviet rule over
    the Baltic republics that resulted from the wartime victors' carve-up
    of eastern Europe.

    Putin himself has said in the past the CIS had a limited lifespan.
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