Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Bucharest: Foreign affairs Min.: No taboo themes at the Black Sea

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

  • Bucharest: Foreign affairs Min.: No taboo themes at the Black Sea

    Bucharest Daily News, Romania
    June 4 2006

    Foreign affairs minister: No taboo themes at the Black Sea Forum
    Andreea Pocotila


    Basescu is seen with his Azeri conterpart, Ilham Aliyev, at te
    presidential palace in Bucharest.


    The Black Sea region is among Romania's top concerns on matters of
    foreign affairs, as today it holds a forum aimed at tackling the main
    issues of the region.

    The Black Sea Forum held today in Bucharest will include debates on
    multilateral issues and there will be no taboo themes during the
    presidential discussions, yesterday said Foreign Affairs Minister
    Mihai Razvan Ungureanu in an interview with the Mediafax news agency.
    "Unfortunately, the Black Sea region has a pretty bad image - that of
    an area burdened by conflicts, an area where policies seem unclear or
    subversive, not open and orientated towards cooperation," was one of
    the reasons Ungureanu gave for the organization of the Black Sea
    Forum.
    The Black Sea Forum is aimed to help build mutual trust in the
    region, facilitate synergy between regional initiatives, identify and
    initiate ideas, promote pragmatic regional projects that meet the
    actual needs of the region and generate a mutual awareness dialogue
    and share lesson learned by the region with the extra regional
    partners, says the event's presentation. The forum will be based on
    active and open dialogue between institutions and civil society
    within the Black Sea region, as well as with European and
    Euro-Atlantic partners.
    The event's purpose is to create a platform for cooperation and
    commitment to development of a regional strategy and a common vision,
    as manifestation of a new political vision, and to identify
    coordination opportunities based on this vision.
    Ungureanu said the Romanian initiative of organizing a Black Sea
    Forum drew the attention of European leaders, as many representatives
    of foreign affairs ministries announced their participation at the
    event. He pointed out that these officials will transform the
    summit's message into a political guideline of the European Union.
    "Romania is now a NATO member, it is getting ready to become a member
    of the EU, it will be country on the cusp of the two clubs, the
    European and the Euro-Atlantic," Ungureanu said, adding that it is
    time for the Black Sea region to be included on the agenda of serious
    problems of both NATO and the EU.
    The minister underlined that cooperation is rare in the Black Sea
    region and there are no institutions that can guarantee or activate
    collaboration.
    "Indeed, the Organization of Black Sea Economic Cooperation (OCEMN)
    has several successful projects that have functioned and are
    functioning, but they are insufficient for the energies invested in
    this format of cooperation," said Ungureanu.
    The Black Sea forum is intended to create a reflex of dialogue, and
    dialogue means trust, while the latter generates cooperation,
    explained Ungureanu.
    "It is a Romanian idea, organized by Romania, but for a general
    benefit," said the official.
    Ungureanu said there is not an incompatibility between the regional
    dialogue on the Black Sea area and the internationalization of this
    issue.
    "International policy stopped isolating parts of the globe, it does
    not hide them anymore behind tall fences, for them to be solved
    through the minimum contribution of two or three actors;
    globalization means drawing everybody's attention to complicated
    themes," Ungureanu explained. The minister said globalization implies
    the involvement of world players such as the Russian Federation, the
    United States and China.
    "The Black Sea has a global destiny, it can become not only a
    European or continental sea, but a sea of the world," Ungureanu said,
    adding that it is a place where several civilizations converge and it
    can either be an energetic bridge, a political one or an amalgamation
    of economic factors.
    "Everybody needs the Black Sea," Ungureanu added.
    Asked what gives him the guarantee that the forum will manage to ease
    dialogue between regional leaders, Ungureanu's main argument was that
    nothing like this has ever been initiated: "It is the first bold step
    forward." However, he added the journey will not end until dozens of
    similar steps have been taken, using the Romanian initiative as a
    model.
    Asked if instead of an active and cooperative dialogue the forum
    might witness quarrels and arguments, Ungureanu said such things will
    not happen because the region is mature enough and it only needs for
    this maturity to be recognized.
    Representatives from Armenia, the Republic of Moldova, Azerbaijan,
    Turkey, Bulgaria, Ukraine, Georgia, Romania, Greece, and Russia were
    invited to the forum. Officials form European and international
    organizations will also attend the event.
    By yesterday no representative of Russia had confirmed his or her
    presence at the forum, according to the list of participants released
    yesterday by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Russia has always been
    reticent about attending and consenting to agreements regarding the
    Black Sea. President Traian Basescu last year said it is time for the
    Black Sea to cease being a Russian lake.
    The list of participants at the Black Sea Forum includes Armenian
    President Robert Kocharian and his Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham
    Aliev.
    Kocharian and Aliev are slated to meet on the sidelines of the summit
    in Romania, for talks over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh,
    which is inside Azerbaijan but populated mostly by ethnic Armenians,
    who have run it since an uneasy 1994 cease-fire ended six years of
    full-scale fighting.
    Kocharian on Saturday dampened expectations for today's meeting with
    his Azerbaijani counterpart, again accusing Azerbaijan of being
    belligerent and insincere about peacefully resolving the nearly
    two-decade conflict over the disputed area.
    Talks held between the two leaders in France in February ended in
    failure, despite international mediators' involvement, and the lack
    of resolution has hindered development throughout the strategic
    Caucasus region.
    Sporadic border clashes have grown more frequent.
    "We are discussing a variation that, by my reckoning, allows a
    long-term and peaceful resolution. But I have modest expectations for
    this meeting," Kocharian told reporters.
    "The impression is forming that the Azerbaijani side is not fully
    devoted to peaceful resolution of the conflict, which the
    militaristic statements heard in Baku demonstrate," he said.
    Aliev's spokesman, Novruz Mammadov, meanwhile accused Armenia of
    stoking tensions on the eve of the meeting of the two presidents in
    Romania and said Yerevan was not prepared for serious dialogue.
    "On the one hand, (Kocharian) agreed to such a meeting, but on the
    other, he is already anticipating no results. I think that Kocharian
    wants to just protect himself," Mammadov said.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X