Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Ex-Soviet Leaders Aim For Eurasia Customs Union

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

  • Ex-Soviet Leaders Aim For Eurasia Customs Union

    EX-SOVIET LEADERS AIM FOR EURASIA CUSTOMS UNION

    Agence France Presse -- English
    June 23, 2006 Friday 8:56 PM GMT

    Ex-Soviet leaders meeting in the Belarus capital on Friday discussed
    setting up a vast customs union between the frontiers of Europe and
    Asia by 2007.

    "We have to decide on... the creation of a full customs union,"
    Belarussian President Alexander Lukashenko said at the start of the
    meetings held in the country's new grandiose national library.

    Lukashenko was hosting two Moscow-led groupings of former Soviet
    republics -- the Eurasian Economic Community (EEC) and the Collective
    Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO).

    "By the end of this year, we will prepare all the legal bases for a
    customs union," Uzbek President Islam Karimov said at a news conference
    after the meetings.

    Kazakhstan's President Nursultan Nazarbayev said that "the draft laws
    are ready," adding that some 80 percent of tariffs among EEC member
    states have already been agreed.

    Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia and Tajikistan are all members
    of the EEC, which was set up in 1999. Uzbekistan is in the process
    of joining.

    Grigory Rapota, the EEC's secretary-general, said a customs union
    would boost overland rail trade between South-East Asia and Europe,
    generating economic gains for transit countries.

    The EEC, he said, was planning direct container transport between
    the Chinese city of Urumqi and the Belarussian city of Brest --
    on the border with Poland.

    The Eurasia Development Bank -- a project funded by Russia and
    Kazakhstan with start-up capital of 1.5 billion dollars -- would
    also help boost economic links when it starts work later this month,
    he added.

    But talks on the customs union have snagged over the question of
    joining the World Trade Organisation (WTO) -- Kyrgyzstan is already a
    member, while Russia and Kazakhstan are both candidates for accession
    to the global trade body.

    "It's difficult. Important economic interests for each country are
    involved," Rapota said, highlighting difficulties on agreeing common
    customs laws, tariffs and rules on investment.

    In a final statement after the EEC meeting, heads of state agreed
    to "guarantee the interests of member states acceding to the WTO
    (World Trade Organisation), taking into account the creation of a
    customs union."

    Also Friday, members of the CSTO met for talks aimed at boosting
    the group's international profile but failed to agree on setting up
    measures for mutual defence.

    "We're sorry we didn't manage to do this today but the talks will
    continue," Armenian President Robert Kocharyan said at the news
    conference following the meeting.

    A draft final statement had called for "provision of emergency
    military-technical assistance to CSTO member states where there
    is a security threat or against whom an act of aggression has been
    committed."

    The CSTO, set up in 1992 to focus on anti-terrorism and
    counternarcotics programmes, is made up of Armenia, Belarus,
    Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan.

    Uzbekistan was accepted as a full member at the meeting on Friday.

    The group's secretary general, Nikolai Bordyuzha, called in an
    interview with the Belarussian Military newspaper for the CSTO to
    organise "military, peacekeeping and collective reaction forces for
    emergency situations."

    Bordyuzha also said the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO)
    had failed to respond to his offer for cooperation from the grouping
    of ex-Soviet states.

    "It doesn't bother us. The CSTO is quite a developed organisation
    with significant contacts. Our priority, I note, is the UN, not NATO,"
    Bordyuzha said.

    As an example of a successful CSTO project, Bordyuzha referred to
    an anti-drugs initiative called "Channel," set up in 2004 and now
    including countries such as China, India, Pakistan and the United
    States.
Working...
X