Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Russia Alarmed Over New EU Pact

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

  • Russia Alarmed Over New EU Pact

    RUSSIA ALARMED OVER NEW EU PACT

    BBC NEWS
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/e urope/8061042.stm
    2009/05/22 08:13:25 GMT

    Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has warned the European Union not
    to turn a proposed partnership with former Soviet countries against
    Moscow.

    Mr Medvedev was speaking at the end of a Russia-EU summit held
    against a background of deep divisions over security, trade and
    energy supplies.

    He also signalled a new gas crisis may lie ahead, suggesting Ukraine
    lacks the money to pay for gas Russia provides.

    A row over prices severely affected supplies to Europe in January.

    The BBC's Richard Galpin in Moscow says divisions between Russia and
    the European Union seem to be growing ever wider, and this latest
    summit, held in the far east of Russia, made that abundantly clear,
    with little sign of progress on any significant topic.

    'Anti-Russian bent'

    "We would not want the Eastern Partnership to turn into partnership
    against Russia. There are various examples," Mr Mevedev told a news
    conference at the end of the summit.

    "I would simply not want this partnership to consolidate certain
    individual states, which are of an anti-Russian bent, with other
    European states," he said.

    Moscow has accused the 27-member bloc of creating new dividing lines
    in Europe by offering closer ties to six former Soviet republics.

    The Eastern Partnership Initiative aims to forge close political and
    economic ties in exchange for democratic reforms.

    Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine have signed
    up to the initiative, which seeks to bolster stability in the region.

    However it does not offer the prospect of eventual EU membership.

    Divisive issue

    On the divisive issue of energy supplies, President Medvedev raised
    questions about whether Ukraine can afford billions of dollars to
    top up its gas stocks.

    "We have doubts about Ukraine's ability to pay," he said.

    He also proposed that Moscow and the EU should help Ukraine get a
    loan for gas payments.

    Ukraine has denied there is any problem.

    Russia supplies 42% of EU gas imports. Its decision to cut all gas to
    Ukraine - a vital transit country - meant that many EU member states
    also lost their supplies of gas for two weeks in January.

    Speaking in Khabarovsk, European Commission President Jose Manuel
    Barroso warned there should be no more disruptions to gas supplies
    from Russia.
Working...
X