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Miguel Angel Moratinos: Russia Should Not View OSCE As Enemy

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  • Miguel Angel Moratinos: Russia Should Not View OSCE As Enemy

    MIGUEL ANGEL MORATINOS: RUSSIA SHOULD NOT VIEW OSCE AS ENEMY

    Interfax, Russia
    Aug 30 2007

    OSCE Chairman-in-Office and Spanish Foreign Minister Miguel Angel
    Moratinos believes the upcoming parliamentary elections in Russia
    will be lawful and hopes that Russia will invite the OSCE to be an
    integral part of the election process.

    "I think the elections in Russia will be held appropriately and
    observe election laws. It appears to me that the OSCE will not have
    problems," Moratinos told Interfax correspondents Olga Golovanova
    and Yekaterina Komissar.

    "The OSCE takes part in political affairs when it is invited to a
    country where elections are held. I am certainly confident that the
    Russian leadership will invite the OSCE to take part in this process.

    We will definitely discuss this today, and it seems to me that the
    OSCE's involvement should be considered in a constructive manner," he
    said before negotiations with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.

    The OSCE should help the institutions responsible for organizing
    elections in Russia, Moratinos said. "On no account should the OSCE
    be viewed as an enemy. Russia is an OSCE member; and therefore,
    it should defend the common principles," he said.

    There have been debates previously within the OSCE itself - between
    the Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights and the
    Parliamentary Assembly - in monitoring election processes in different
    countries, Moratinos said. "I think the Spanish chairmanship has
    helped make sure that these two organizations work well together. In
    any case, the recent elections in Armenia and Kazakhstan went fairly
    well. We hope the same will happen in Russia," he said.

    Moratinos, however, could not specify how many OSCE observers could
    monitor the Duma elections. "Russia is a large country in geographical
    terms. This is a question for experts, and they should determine how
    many observers will go and to what regions of Russia," he said.

    Commenting on Russia's decision to impose a moratorium on the Treaty
    on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe (CFE), Moratinos said this move
    should be viewed as an invitation to further negotiate the weapons
    control problem.

    "As OSCE chairman-in-office, I expressed my concern about this from
    the very start. If we all use this moratorium as a proposal that
    negotiations should be continued, this situation could be good for
    everyone involved. Now that Russia has expressed its standpoint on this
    issue, this could possibly help the other CFE signatories concerned
    about the situation to express their positions on the issue as well,"
    Moratinos said.

    Moratinos said he recently made the decision to assign an official
    from his ministry to deal solely with the CFE until November.

    "My goal is to sign a statement during an OSCE ministerial meeting
    in Madrid to make it clear that we all want [the adapted CFE] to
    be ratified and that there is enough political will to resolve the
    problems surrounding the Treaty's enforcement. Definitely, we will
    talk about this during the negotiations," Moratinos said.

    Regarding U.S. plans to deploy missile defense elements in Europe,
    Moratinos said, "Each country can settle issues related to its defense
    system at a bilateral level. Therefore, Poland and the Czech Republic
    can establish any bilateral relations with the U.S. This should
    be respected."

    "However, this problem should also be considered in the international
    context, which calls for negotiations and explanations.

    We have always believed that there should be dialogue between the U.S.,
    the countries [to host missile defense elements] and Russia.

    Therefore, the NATO-Russia Council attached particular significance
    to the need for the United States to provide explanations regarding
    the parameters of its decision," he said.

    Moratinos also told Interfax that Spain's OSCE chairmanship would be
    discussed during Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero's
    visit to Russia in late September.

    "Prime Minister Zapatero will arrive in Russia at the end of September
    to further strengthen the wonderful relations existing between Spain
    and Russia," Moratinos said.

    During Zapatero's visit to Moscow, Spain would like to discuss the
    situation in Iran and in the Balkans, Spain's OSCE chairmanship in
    2007, and the bilateral agenda, including political dialogue, trade
    and economic relations, as well as energy issues, Moratinos said.

    "We hope that this visit will help bring closer our leaders' positions
    and promote confidence between them and that they will be able to
    discuss international issues," he said.

    Moratinos said preparations for the Spanish prime minister's visit
    to Moscow was among the goals of his current trip to Moscow.

    Rodriguez Zapatero's September visit will be his third to Russia,
    Moratinos said. Russian President Vladimir Putin visited Madrid
    in 2006.
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