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Black Sea Summit Opens In Romanian Capital

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  • Black Sea Summit Opens In Romanian Capital

    BLACK SEA SUMMIT OPENS IN ROMANIAN CAPITAL

    AP Worldstream
    Jun 05, 2006

    The presidents of Ukraine, Georgia and Armenia were among leaders
    attending a Black Sea summit on Monday aimed at tackling drug- and
    people-smuggling in the region and finding ways to clean up pollution
    in the sea, as well as discussing alternative energy routes.

    "Putting the Black Sea on the map is a challenge in itself," said
    Romanian Foreign Minister Mihai Razvan Ungureanu opening the summit.

    "Good governance, sustainable development to define issues of common
    interests and to evaluate national and regional capacities and to
    prepare the future in a pro-active manner. ... We want a new vision
    to reflect new realities," he said.

    The main topics on the summit's agenda would be environment protection,
    regional cooperation, joint energy projects, combatting cross-border
    crime and improving infrastructure.

    Among those attending were Presidents Viktor Yushchenko of Ukraine,
    Mikhail Saakashvili of Georgia, Robert Kocharian of Armenia, Vladimir
    Voronin of Moldova and Ilham Aliev of Azerbaijan, as well as officials
    from Turkey, Bulgaria, Greece and Lithuania.

    Top officials from NATO, the Organization for Security and Cooperation
    in Europe, the United Nations and the Council of Europe are also
    attending the summit.

    Kocharian and Aliev are expected to hold talks on the status of
    Nagorno-Karabakh on the sidelines of the summit. Talks between the two
    leaders in France in February ended in failure, despite international
    mediators' efforts to push the leaders to resolve Nagorno-Karabakh's
    status.

    Nagorno-Karabakh 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 war. Sporadic border clashes have grown more
    frequent since the breakdown of talks. The lack of resolution has
    hindered development throughout the strategic region.

    Romania, Bulgaria, Turkey, Ukraine, Russia and Georgia directly border
    the Black Sea, which is one of the world's most polluted seas.

    Its only outlet to outside seas is via the Bosphorus Straits.

    Russia declined to send a high-level official to the summit but
    requested observer status. It is being represented by its ambassador
    to Bucharest, said Romanian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Corina Vintan.
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