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Ex-Soviet nations meet in Belarus to discuss defence and economic co

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  • Ex-Soviet nations meet in Belarus to discuss defence and economic co

    PRAVDA< Russia
    June 23 2006

    Ex-Soviet nations meet in Belarus to discuss defence and economic
    cooperation



    Leaders of Russia, Belarus and four Central Asian nations -
    Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan - sat down for a
    summit of their Eurasian Economic Community in the Belarusian
    capital, focusing on plans to form a customs union.

    Opening the talks, Belarus' authoritarian president, Alexander
    Lukashenko, also said they would discuss ways to coordinate
    strategies for joining the World Trade Organization.

    Talks on forming a customs union were also moving slowly, he said,
    and the pact's members so far had agreed on just over half of all
    customs tariffs. "The process isn't advancing as quickly as we would
    like it to happen," Lukashenko said.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin, who took over from Lukashenko on
    Friday as the chairman of the group, tried to sound optimistic,
    saying that "we are paying a close attention to forming the customs
    union and have an intention to form it quickly."

    Numerous previous attempts by the ex-Soviet nations to form a customs
    union and coordinate their economic policies have failed because of
    sharp differences in size and level of development of their
    economies, as well as fears of Russian domination.

    The same six leaders and Armenia's president planned later Friday to
    take part in a summit of the Collective Security Treaty Organization,
    according to the AP.

    Lukashenko, dubbed "Europe's last dictator" by the United States and
    other Western nations for his relentless crackdown on dissent, has
    repeatedly accused the West of harboring aggressive intentions and
    sought to build closer economic and military ties with Russia and
    other ex-Soviet nations.
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