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  • EU, Russia far apart on rights, Moldova, Georgia

    EU, Russia far apart on rights, Moldova, Georgia

    By Sebastian Alison

    BRUSSELS, Feb 27 (Reuters) - Differences between the European Union
    and Russia will be exposed on human rights and relations with former
    Soviet countries when foreign ministers from the two sides meet on
    Monday.

    Strains over Georgia and Moldova, ex-Soviet states trying to move
    towards the EU but where Moscow keeps troops against their will, are
    set to top the agenda when Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
    meets the EU in Luxembourg.

    The bloc also will take Moscow to task over human rights at
    consultations on Tuesday, days after the European Court of Human
    Rights ruled Russia committed serious abuses, including torture and
    killing, during military offensives in Chechnya.

    "Our concerns are harassment of human rights defenders, especially in
    Chechnya; increased racism and xenophobia; and religious intolerance,
    especially anti-Semitism," an EU official said.

    "The Russians are likely to raise the issue of the rights of
    Russian-speaking minorities in the Baltics."

    Russia and the EU hold a summit in Moscow on May 10 when they hope to
    sign an agreement establishing four "common spaces" on areas of mutual
    interest -- the economy; freedom, security and justice; culture and
    education; and external security.

    But talks on external security are bogged down by Russian resistance
    to the idea that the EU has a role to play in countries Moscow sees as
    in its sphere of influence, namely Ukraine, Belarus, Moldova, Armenia,
    Azerbaijan and Georgia.

    The EU insists it should be involved as these countries are its near
    neighbours following the bloc's enlargement last May.

    Lavrov and Luxembourg Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn, representing
    the EU as his country currently holds the bloc's presidency, will
    discuss Moldova -- which holds parliamentary elections on March 6 and
    whose president Vladimir Voronin has accused Moscow of interfering
    with the election campaign.

    MOSCOW UNCOMFORTABLE IN RIGHTS BODY

    Russia keeps 1,500 troops in Moldova's breakaway Dnestr region
    following a brief war in 1992, despite a pledge to withdraw them, and
    the EU has said it will appoint a special envoy to the country to help
    end the "frozen conflict" there.

    The Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe, the
    continent's human rights watchdog of which Russia is a member along
    with EU states, is the lead player in ending the Dnestr dispute.

    But EU diplomats say Russia feels increasingly uncomfortable with its
    role in the OSCE as countries like Moldova and Georgia have sought to
    escape Moscow's influence, leaving it increasingly isolated within the
    group.

    "Now Russia is paralysing the OSCE's budget, and practically
    paralysing its secretariat," an EU diplomat said, adding that the OSCE
    would also be on the agenda for the talks.

    Russia has faced sharp criticism in recent days. Apart from the
    European Court of Human Rights verdict on Chechnya, President Vladimir
    Putin also heard U.S. President George W. Bush question his commitment
    to democracy.

    Former Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov has also stepped in to
    criticise Putin's record, saying bluntly that the country was on the
    wrong track and he may stand for the presidency in 2008.

    But diplomats said they expected constructive talks with Moscow on
    Iran, the western Balkans and Middle East peace talks.

    Russia is a member, with the EU, United States and the United Nations,
    of the Quartet seeking a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian
    conflict, and after Monday's talks Lavrov will head to London for a
    Quartet meeting on Tuesday.



    02/27/05 04:29 ET
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