Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Fanfare, Criticism For OSCE Summit

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

  • Fanfare, Criticism For OSCE Summit

    FANFARE, CRITICISM FOR OSCE SUMMIT

    Moscow Times
    Nov 30 2010
    Russia

    ASTANA, Kazakhstan - Heads of state flying to Kazakhstan's showpiece
    capital for a security summit this week will be met with fanfare as
    Astana shrugs off critics of its year at the helm of Europe's top
    security and rights watchdog.

    U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is expected at the Organization
    for Security and Cooperation in Europe's first summit since 1999,
    the crowning achievement of Kazakhstan's year as the first former
    Soviet republic to chair the 56-nation body.

    The OSCE says it aims to address urgent problems such as terrorism
    and trafficking of drugs, weapons and people, as well as protracted
    conflicts in the Eurasian region and Afghanistan.

    The Astana summit on Wednesday and Thursday is also a source of pride
    for Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev, who has run his oil-rich
    country for more than 20 years and is keen to display his brainchild -
    the fast-rising capital on the windswept steppe.

    "First and foremost, the OSCE summit is a foreign policy advertisement
    project and President Nazarbayev's personal public relations project,"
    said political analyst Dosym Satpayev.

    "He is very ambitious and is keen to position himself not as a
    regional but, rather, a world leader," he said. "The presentation
    of the new capital - the president's pet and pricey toy - also means
    great promotion for him personally."

    The OSCE has not held a heads of state summit since its Istanbul
    meeting 11 years ago. A spokeswoman for the Vienna-based body said
    members would discuss the reaffirmation of the OSCE's key commitments
    to regional security.

    President Dmitry Medvedev will attend, the Kremlin said. German
    Chancellor Angela Merkel and European Council President Herman Van
    Rompuy are also expected in Astana.

    The leaders of Azerbaijan and Armenia are expected to attend and
    may discuss a long-awaited peace deal for the breakaway region of
    Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Amid unprecedented security measures, Kazakh television and print
    media have posted splashy advertisements of the summit, calling it
    "a great achievement of all people of Kazakhstan."

    But, souring the official pomp, human rights bodies say Kazakhstan
    has reneged on democracy and rights commitments that it promised to
    implement during its year as chair of a group dedicated to democratic
    progress as well as security.

    "We are deeply convinced that Kazakhstan has not made good on all those
    obligations which it undertook when acquiring the right to chair the
    OSCE," said Vyacheslav Abramov, deputy head of the U.S.-based rights
    watchdog Freedom House.

    "No progress has been made in any of the spheres in which Kazakhstan
    pledged to conduct democratic reforms," he said.

    Criticism of Nazarbayev remains taboo at home. The parliament this
    year adopted a law that bestows upon him "Leader of the Nation"
    status and toughens punishment for insulting his dignity in public
    or for desecrating his pictures.

    The veteran leader neither signed the law nor vetoed it.

    Last year, Nazarbayev endorsed a bill allowing officials to block
    Internet sites containing information deemed illegal. At least one
    journalist and one human rights activist are in jail, while authorities
    have closed or fined some critical newspapers.

    Officials respond that Nazarbayev's rule is softer than that in other
    Central Asian states. They say the country has preserved political
    stability and multinational harmony in a region where Islamist
    militancy and ethnic violence is rife.

    Higher living standards are also cited by the leaders of Central Asia's
    largest economy and oil producer. Nazarbayev has overseen more than
    $150 billion in foreign investment and implemented textbook reforms
    of banks and the pension system.

    Kazakh Foreign Ministry spokesman Roman Vasilenko said the West had
    not called Astana's democratic credentials into question. Only the
    speed of democratic change has been debated.

    "The two principles of Kazakhstan's approach are: 'Economics first,
    politics second' and 'Evolution, not revolution,'" he said. "As
    we have seen, these sane and justified principles have ensured our
    country's stability and economic growth.

    "We in Kazakhstan believe that you can't build a democracy on an
    empty stomach."




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X