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Kazakhstan Is Not Going To Chair The OSCE In 2009

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  • Kazakhstan Is Not Going To Chair The OSCE In 2009

    KAZAKHSTAN IS NOT GOING TO CHAIR THE OSCE IN 2009
    Arkady Dubnov

    Vremya Novostei, December 4, 2006, p. 2
    Ferghana.ru, Russia
    Dec 4 2006

    Two-day session of the OSCE Council of Foreign Ministers opening in
    Brussels today is supposed to decide what country to choose for the
    chairman in 2009. Diplomatic sources claim, however, that the session
    will come up with no decision - because of Kazakhstan, one of the
    claimants for the privilege, that all but made it its national idea
    in 2003.

    The first CIS country in the OSCE to aspire for chairmanship in
    the European structure that unites West and East Europe, the United
    States, Canada, and post-Soviet Central Asia, Kazakhstan has both
    supporters and enemies in the matter. Needless to say, the former
    include Astana's partners in the CIS and some West European countries
    - Germany, France, Italy, and the Netherlands. Enemies of the idea
    include the United States and Great Britain that do not think that
    Kazakhstan is up to a number of democratic standards, particularly
    in the sphere of human rights and readiness to arrange free and fair
    elections. Since a consensus is clearly impossible, sources claim
    that the decision will be postponed for until 2007.

    The OSCE headquarters leans toward making Greece chairman in 2009,
    Lithuania in 2010, and Kazakhstan - perhaps - in 2011. The last message
    to this effect, not particularly clear, was sent to Kazakhstan during
    the CIS summit in Minsk, Belarus, on November 28.

    OSCE Chairman and Belgian Foreign Minister Karel de Guht visited the
    capital of Belarus this day. Senior state officials of the Belarussian
    state including President Alexander Lukashenko himself are personae
    non grata in the European Union. Officially, De Guht came to Minsk
    to attend a meeting between presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan
    Robert Kocharjan and Ilham Aliyev. The dialogue between Yerevan and
    Baku over Nagorno-Karabakh has been under way for years, under the
    aegis of the OSCE Minsk Group whose chairmen from Russia, France,
    and the United States were also in Minsk that day.

    Conversation at de Guht's meeting with Belarussian Foreign Minister
    Sergei Martynov was centered around the agenda of the session opening
    in Brussels today. Sources in Vienna claim in the meantime that de
    Guht also met with representatives of the Kazakh authorities. First,
    de Guht told Astana that President Nursultan Nazarbayev needn't bother
    addressing the Brussels session in person to try and persuade opponents
    that Kazakhstan deserved the honor of chairing the OSCE.

    Second, he said that Kazakhstan could aspire for the privilege two
    years later.

    It seems in the meantime that official Astana itself has decided
    to call it off. Well-informed and trustworthy sources there say
    that Nazarbayev himself was extremely critical of the idea of OSCE
    chairmanship at a closed conference the other day. It figures, if
    Astana doesn't want to lose face.
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