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ANKARA: Russia's Putin Says Syria Violence Could Hit Ex-Soviet Bloc

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  • ANKARA: Russia's Putin Says Syria Violence Could Hit Ex-Soviet Bloc

    RUSSIA'S PUTIN SAYS SYRIA VIOLENCE COULD HIT EX-SOVIET BLOC

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Sept 23 2013

    23 September 2013 /REUTERSÄ° SOCHI

    Russian President Vladimir Putin warned ex-Soviet allies on Monday
    that Islamist militancy fuelling the war in Syria could reach their
    countries, some of which have Muslim majorities.

    Russia, which has a large Muslim minority of its own and is fighting
    an Islamist insurgency, has accused the West of helping militants
    by seeking Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's removal without paying
    enough attention to the potential consequences.

    Putin told leaders of the six-nation Collective Security Treaty
    Organisation (CSTO) that militants fighting Assad could eventually
    expand attacks beyond Syria and the Middle East.

    "The militant groups (in Syria) did not come out of nowhere, and they
    will not vanish into thin air," Putin said.

    "The problem of terrorism spilling from one country to another is
    absolutely real and could directly affect the interests of any one
    of our countries," he said, citing the deadly attack on a shopping
    mall in Nairobi as an example.

    "We are now witnessing a terrible tragedy unfold in Kenya. The
    militants came from another country, as far as we can judge, and are
    committing horrendous bloody crimes," Putin said at a CSTO summit in
    the Russian Black Sea resort city of Sochi.

    His words appeared to be a warning about violence spreading from both
    Syria and Afghanistan, which shares a long border with CSTO member
    Tajikistan in Central Asia. The security alliance also includes
    Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Armenia and Belarus.

    Tajikistan, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan all have mostly Muslim
    populations.

    Russian officials have expressed concern that Russian-born militants
    fighting in Syria could return to Russia's North Caucasus and join
    an insurgency that claims lives almost daily.

    They have also voiced worries that violence could spread into former
    Soviet Central Asia and Russia after the withdrawal of most Western
    troops from Afghanistan by the end of next year.

    Russia has been one of Syria's strongest backers in a conflict that
    has killed more than 100,000 people since it began in March 2011,
    delivering arms to Assad's forces and joining China in blocking
    Western-backed initiatives in the U.N. Security Council.

    Russia, which has echoed Assad's contention that he is fighting al
    Qaeda-inspired Islamists rather than a popular revolt against his
    autocratic rule, has warned the West that military intervention in
    Syria would play into the hands of the militants.

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