Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Eurasec to focus on energy, customs on Day 2 of Black Sea summit

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

  • Eurasec to focus on energy, customs on Day 2 of Black Sea summit

    Eurasec to focus on energy, customs on Day 2 of Black Sea summit

    RIA Novosti
    16/08/2006

    MOSCOW, August 16 (RIA Novosti) - Post-Soviet leaders will continue a
    two-day informal summit in southern Russian Wednesday, focusing on a common
    energy market and customs union as part of the five-member Eurasian Economic
    Community (Eurasec).

    The presidents of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Belarus joined
    Russian leader Vladimir Putin in Russia's Black Sea resort of Sochi Tuesday,
    along with the prime minister of Armenia, which is an observer in the
    organization.

    "The agenda includes the formation of a customs union within the
    organization," a Kremlin source said earlier in the week. "Strategy and
    tactics for the community's progress will be discussed in this context."

    Ukraine's prime minister, Viktor Yanukovych, is also attending the summit as
    part of his first foreign trip in his new capacity, which he assumed on
    August 4.

    Putin and Yanukovych are expected to focus on controversial issues of
    bilateral relations, including supplies of Russian natural gas to Ukraine.

    "Russia believes President Putin and Premier Yanukovych will have the chance
    to have an extensive talk during the informal summit," said Sergei
    Prikhodko, a Russian presidential aide.

    Yanukovych, who is currently meeting Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov,
    said he was seeking to improve Russian-Ukrainian relations during his trip
    and prepare the ground for a future meeting between the Russian and
    Ukrainian presidents.

    The Kremlin official also said the leaders would discuss formation of the
    common energy market as part of a Russian initiative to set up international
    centers offering nuclear fuel services announced by President Vladimir Putin
    at the Eurasec summit in St. Petersburg in January.

    "We need to create a prototype of such global infrastructure that would
    enable all concerned parties to have equal access to nuclear energy. I would
    like to emphasize that non-proliferation requirements have to be reliably
    observed in the process," Putin said.

    The president said the UN's nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic
    Energy Agency, should oversee the centers.

    "A system of IAEA-controlled international centers offering nuclear fuel
    services, including enrichment, without discrimination, should become a key
    element of the suggested infrastructure," he said then.

    The Kremlin source said the leaders would also discuss the preparation of
    documents establishing the legal basis for Uzbekistan's accession to
    Eurasec.

    The five members of Eurasec, set up in 2000, agreed in January to admit
    Uzbekistan to the organization, which also includes Moldova, Armenia and
    Ukraine as observers.
Working...
X