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Belarus PM Thanks Armenia For Support

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  • Belarus PM Thanks Armenia For Support

    BELARUS PM THANKS ARMENIA FOR SUPPORT
    By Shakeh Avoyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Oct 23 2006

    Belarus's visiting Prime Minister Sergei Sidorsky thanked Armenia
    on Monday for supporting his country, increasingly ostracized by
    the West for its poor democracy and human rights records, in the
    international arena.

    "Belarus supports Armenia in international affairs and we thanked
    Armenia for supporting Belarus in international affairs," Sidorsky
    said after holding talks with Armenian leaders on the first day of
    his official visit to Yerevan.

    Although Sidorsky did not elaborate, he seemed to be alluding to
    Armenia's refusal to join the United States and the European Union
    in condemning the authoritarian regime of Belarusian President
    Aleksandr Lukashenko. Official Yerevan has repeatedly sided with
    Russia in the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe and
    other international bodies to vote against resolutions criticizing
    Lukashenko's intolerance of dissent and reported human rights abuses.

    Lukashenko, known for his tough anti-Western rhetoric, faced renewed
    international criticism as recently as last March over his handling of
    a controversial presidential election which OSCE observers denounced
    as undemocratic. President Robert Kocharian reportedly congratulated
    him on his hotly disputed reelection.

    Meeting with his Belarusian counterpart, Prime Minister Andranik
    Markarian said Armenian-Belarusian ties have been cemented by what
    he described as a "warm personal rapport" existing between the two
    presidents. "Cooperation between the two states and the two governments
    is proceeding very well," Markarian told an ensuing news conference. "I
    am very satisfied with our negotiations."

    The talks appeared to have focused on bilateral economic ties, with
    the two premiers praising a steep increase in Armenian-Belarusian
    trade reported by them in the last few years. But they both admitted
    that its volume remains modest in absolute terms.

    Markarian and Sidorsky said nothing about ongoing military cooperation
    between the two ex-Soviet states aligned in the Russian-led Collective
    Security Treaty Organization. Armenia and Belarus are bound by
    bilateral agreements that allow for mutual arms supplies.

    Belarusian Defense Minister Leonid Maltsev reaffirmed his country's
    interest in the developing "mutually beneficial" military ties with
    Armenia as he visited Yerevan in December last year. According to
    Kocharian's office, Maltsev and Armenian leaders discussed "prospects
    for deepening" those ties.
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