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Russia, EU to unveil partnership accord at Tuesday summit

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  • Russia, EU to unveil partnership accord at Tuesday summit

    Russia, EU to unveil partnership accord at Tuesday summit

    By ALEX NICHOLSON
    .c The Associated Press


    MOSCOW (AP) - Russia and the European Union are expected to unveil a
    broad partnership accord at a summit Tuesday that represents an
    attempt to reinvigorate relations after a troubled year.

    As the EU swelled last year with 10 new members, most of them from the
    former Soviet bloc, the EU's policy is seen to have become more
    assertive toward Russia.

    The meeting in Moscow is the first since a stormy summit last fall in
    The Hague, Netherlands, when Russia accused the EU of fomenting street
    protests in Ukraine and partnership negotiations fell apart.

    EU officials say they do not want another breakdown and are ready to
    agree to a less-than-perfect accord, hoping to nail down outstanding
    issues in the months ahead.

    The partnership should benefit both sides: The EU will get a forum to
    launch economic cooperation with an energy-rich partner that is hungry
    for Western investment.

    Yet the agreement to be unveiled Tuesday comes against the backdrop of
    lingering mistrust between the two powers.

    ``Many Russian leaders now view the EU as a hostile power that is
    expanding into Russia's traditional sphere of influence,'' says
    Charles Grant, director of the Center for European Research, a London
    think tank, in a recent paper on the EU's relations with its eastern
    neighbors.

    ``The EU, meanwhile, has become increasingly concerned about Russia's
    eroding democratic standards and weak regard for human rights.''

    In a statement prior to Tuesday's summit, European Commission
    President Jose Manuel Barroso said he wants relations to be taken to a
    ``new and higher level.''

    Barroso is hoping the approval of a long-delayed partnership accord,
    setting out four ``common spaces'' between Russia and the 25-member
    bloc, will provide the necessary momentum.

    The wide-ranging pact encompasses security, economic and humanitarian
    issues and aims to enhance cooperation in transport, energy and
    regional conflict resolution as well as harmonizing legal standards
    and promoting trade and investment.

    Until recently, EU officials said they were far from a partnership
    deal. On the eve of the approval ceremony, key disputes remained but
    the West Europeans insisted they will be resolved in the months ahead.

    One difference is over Russia's demand for an easing of visa
    rules. The EU will only agree to that if Russia takes back Russian
    nationals and others who entered the EU illegally from Russia. Also,
    the EU wants Russia to phase out Siberia overflight charges that West
    European airlines now pay to Moscow.

    The partnership aims to craft a single EU-Russian market with no
    barriers to trade and to introduce economic reforms, competitiveness
    and good economic governance in Russia. It also wants more cooperation
    on investments, financial services, telecommunications, transport,
    energy and the environment.

    The EU also plans programs to foster democracy, the rule of law, human
    rights, an independent judiciary and media and cooperation on
    combating terrorism, organized crime and corruption.

    The EU is particularly interested in assisting Russia to end ``frozen
    conflicts'' in the former Soviet region - Trans-Dniester in Moldova,
    Abkhazia and South Ossetia in Georgia, and Nagorno-Karabakh in
    Azerbaijan - by taking humanitarian and economic aid to those regions,
    and to tackle poverty and human rights abuses there that the EU sees
    as causes of instability.

    Russia is the EU's fifth largest trade partner, with bilateral trade
    totaling US$125 billion (96.55 billion) in 2004. Russian exports
    amounted to US$91 billion (70.29 billion), the lion's share accounted
    for by oil and gas deliveries. Natural gas monopoly Gazprom provides a
    quarter of Europe's gas, while 85 percent of the 4 million barrels of
    oil per day that Russia - the world's No. 2 exporter - sends outside
    the former Soviet Union went to Europe in 2004.

    Energy is expected to become an even bigger focus in negotiations
    starting next month, when the United Kingdom - whose North Sea oil and
    gas fields are dwindling - takes over the EU presidency.



    05/09/05 14:35 EDT

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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