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  • ANKARA: Black Sea's Importance Growing, Says Bulgarian Envoy

    BLACK SEA'S IMPORTANCE GROWING, SAYS BULGARIAN ENVOY

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Thursday, January 28, 2010

    Russian coast guard boats arrive in the Black Sea port of Ochamchiri
    in December. Bulgaria's Special Envoy Ivan Petkov says the Black Sea
    is a strategic crossroads. AP photo

    Russian coast guard boats arrive in the Black Sea port of Ochamchiri
    in December. Bulgaria's Special Envoy Ivan Petkov says the Black Sea
    is a strategic crossroads. AP photo

    The strategic importance of the Black Sea as a key geopolitical
    crossroad linking Europe with Central Asia and the Caucasus is ever
    growing, according to Bulgaria's Special Envoy Ivan Petkov, speaking
    at the Third Japan-Black Sea Region Dialogue held this week in Tokyo.

    Petkov is the representative of the Bulgarian chairmanship-in-office
    of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation, or BSEC. The topic of the
    two-day meeting was "Prospects of changing the wider Black Sea region
    and the role of Japan." It was supported by the Tokyo Club and the
    Japan Foundation and sponsored by the Global Forum of Japan, or GFJ,
    and BSEC.

    "The time when Japanese foreign policy toward the Black Sea region
    was cautious should be over," said Petkov. He said Japan is faithful
    to universal values such as democracy and the market economy and
    that it would only benefit from increased involvement in the region,
    from stronger ties with Brussels and greater coordination with BSEC.

    Petkov outlined the three directions as sectoral partnerships within
    the frame of the Black Sea Synergy to gather financial support
    for shared projects in energy, transport and the environment; the
    necessity of effective participation of the European Commission
    as an observer to BSEC and of involving more actively the other EU
    member states with an observer or sectoral partner status to BSEC;
    and strengthening of BSEC-EU dialogue through meetings in Brussels.

    BSEC has been cooperating with the European Union more closely and
    establishing higher-level cooperation and ties with other important
    organizations. Petkov said BSEC became a member of the United Nations'
    Alliance of Civilizations in 2009.

    Importance of security

    Turning to the issue of security, Petkov said all BSEC members, not
    just the littoral states, should pay a working visit to the Black Sea
    Border Coordination and Information Center in Bourgas. "The aim is
    to contribute to strengthening the efficiency of border management,"
    he said.

    BSEC Secretary-General Ambassador Leonidas Chrysanthopoulus also
    addressed security. "After Sept. 11, the fight against terrorism and
    the efforts to dry up its financial resources, which are mostly linked
    to various forms of organized crime such as the trafficking of arms,
    drugs and human beings, have also increased the political and strategic
    importance of the Black Sea region. We must acknowledge that frozen
    conflicts pose a threat to security in the region. Frozen conflicts
    constitute the main obstacles to enhancing regional cooperation. These
    should be dealt with effectively and solved peacefully," he said.

    Mithat Rende, director-general of economic affairs for Turkey's
    Foreign Ministry, talked about his country's initiative to create
    the Caucasus Stability and Cooperation Platform. "Countries in the
    region support this initiative and hopefully it will create new and
    constructive dynamics that will assist in the comprehensive settlement
    of all Caucasian disputes."

    Rende also referred to the Russian-Georgian war in 2008 and how BSEC
    has continued to meet "in a friendly and constructive atmosphere."

    "This has been a clear indication of the commitment of all the
    member states to BSEC and to its goals of turning the BSEC region
    into a region of peace, stability and prosperity through economic
    cooperation."

    Additional steps

    According to BSEC's secretary-general, of particular importance are the
    additional steps being planned "in facilitating the road transport of
    goods, which is also expected to contribute to trade relations in the
    region. Within this framework, a pilot project for a BSEC permit system
    for the road transit of goods has been prepared. The implementation
    of this pilot project will start Feb. 16 with the participation of
    some of the BSEC member states. This permit system is expected to
    facilitate the work of the road transporters and simplify border
    procedures in the region. With this project, BSEC will become the
    first regional organization to issue such transit documents.

    "Once they are in force, BSEC agreements to simplify visa procedures
    for businesspeople and lorry drivers who are nationals of BSEC member
    states, signed in 2008 in Tirana, will also surely contribute to
    trade cooperation."

    BSEC members are Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Georgia,
    Greece, Moldova, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Turkey and Ukraine. The
    organization was established in 1992 through Turkey's initiative and
    as Chrysanthopoulus describes it, "Today, BSEC is the most inclusive
    regional organization in the Black Sea area with developed mechanisms
    and instruments of cooperation and a diverse institutional framework."
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