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Moldova foreign min announces Uzbekistan withdrawal from GUUAM

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  • Moldova foreign min announces Uzbekistan withdrawal from GUUAM

    Moldova foreign min announces Uzbekistan withdrawal from GUUAM


    11.05.2005, 21.59

    CHISINAU, May 11 (Itar-Tass) - After sending a statement about its
    quitting the GUUAM Group (Georgia, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Armenia and
    Moldova), Uzbekistan has automatically discontinued its membership in
    that organization. Tass learned this from the Moldovan Ministry for
    Foreign Affairs and European Integration. After the GUUAM summit in
    Chisinau, Moldova assumed the chairmanship of the organization.

    `Under the GUUAM regulations, Moldova, chairing the organization, must
    inform the leaders of Ukraine, Georgia and Azerbaijan of Uzbekistan's
    decision,' the ministry noted.

    Uzbekistan's President lslam Karimov sent the message about the
    withdrawal of his country from GUUAM to Moldova's president Vladimir
    Voronin on May 3. In the letter this decision is explained by the fact
    that `because of its geographic position Uzbekistan sees no ways for the
    realization of its interests in the areas of economy and security in the
    framework of the new initiatives and projects announced by GUUAM.'

    Ukraine, Georgia, Azerbaijan and Moldova formed GUAM on October 10, 1997
    at the summit of the Council of Europe in Strasbourg. In April 1999, at
    the meeting of GUAM states in Washington, during the celebration of the
    50th anniversary of NATO, Uzbekistan was admitted into the organization,
    and it was named GUUAM. In June 2002 Uzbekistan stated that it remains
    within GUUAM as an observer and reserves the right not to participate in
    some functions.

    The Uzbek leaders have stayed away from the GUUAM summit in Chisinau in
    connection with the fact that, in Tashkent's opinion, GUUAM has turned
    into a `political organization.' Thus, Georgian president Mikhail
    Saakashvili made a call at the Chisinau summit for `a third wave of
    revolutions' in the post-Soviet space.
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