Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Leaders Of Six Ex-Soviet States Discuss Customs Union, Energy Market

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

  • Leaders Of Six Ex-Soviet States Discuss Customs Union, Energy Market

    LEADERS OF SIX EX-SOVIET STATES DISCUSS CUSTOMS UNION, ENERGY MARKET, WTO BIDS
    Vladimir Isachenkov

    AP Worldstream
    Aug 16, 2006

    Russian President Vladimir Putin met Wednesday with leaders of five
    other ex-Soviet states to discuss creating a customs union and common
    energy market, and to coordinate their bids to join the World Trade
    Organization.

    Leaders from Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan
    joined Putin at his Black Sea residence in the resort of Sochi for
    talks focused on adding more substance to the Eurasian Economic
    Community _ a grouping that aims to restore economic ties lost after
    the 1991 Soviet collapse.

    In addition to creating a customs union and a common energy market,
    proposals include water energy regulation in Central Asia and setting
    up a Eurasian hydroelectric consortium.

    The grouping's long-held cooperation plans have stalled amid
    differences over the size of their economies and levels of their
    development as Russia maneuvers to re-establish its clout in former
    Soviet republics.

    At the start of the session, Putin said the group's members should
    coordinate their efforts with their bids to join the World Trade
    Organization.

    "Our intentions to deepen cooperation in the framework of the Eurasian
    Economic Community, including the setting up of a customs union, should
    be clearly and precisely coordinated with the pace and details of WTO
    accession for each of our nations," Putin said in televised remarks.

    Russia, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan have been involved in WTO accession
    talks, but for the grouping's other members, joining the global trade
    body has remained a distant perspective.

    Armenian President Robert Kocharian was attending the meeting as an
    observer, as was Ukraine's new prime minister, Viktor Yanukovych, on
    his first trip abroad since being confirmed to the post by parliament
    earlier this month.

    The Kremlin strongly backed Yanukovych's fraud-marred 2004 presidential
    bid, and his return to the premiership was widely seen as a victory
    to Moscow's interests in Ukraine and a counterbalance to Ukrainian
    President Viktor Yushchenko's efforts to move his nation closer to
    the West.

    Yanukovych on Tuesday said he and his Russian counterpart, Mikhail
    Fradkov, reached a tentative deal on Russian natural gas supplies to
    Ukraine next year.

    He also reaffirmed his campaign pledge to make Russian the second
    state language in Ukraine, but added that his Party of Regions for
    that needs a two-third majority in parliament which it doesn't have.

    On Tuesday, Putin met for one-on-one talks with several of the leaders,
    including Kazakhstan's President Nursultan Nazarbayev. The two leaders
    signed a series of agreements intended to streamline customs tariffs
    and tariffs for transporting Kazakh cargo via Russian railroad lines.
Working...
X