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CIS humanitarian cooperation council focused on particular projects

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  • CIS humanitarian cooperation council focused on particular projects

    ITAR-TASS News Agency, Russia
    March 17, 2007 Saturday 03:08 AM EST

    CIS humanitarian cooperation council focused on particular projects

    ALMATY, March 16

    Almaty has hosted the first meeting of the CIS Humanitarian
    Cooperation Council.

    Special presidential representatives from the eight member-countries
    of the Commonwealth of Independents States, as well as senior
    officials for culture, science, and education met here on Friday to
    map out plans for 2007-2008, discuss the council's regulations, and
    other procedural issues.

    Participants in the meeting focused on the Interstate Humanitarian
    Cooperation Fund, which will begin implementing real projects soon.

    The council also discussed the possibilities to set up national
    offices of the fund. One of their key tasks will be the intensive
    drawing of non-budgetary funds for the projects with due account of
    peculiarities of each CIS country.

    ``We have already discussed certain programs, which will be launched
    in the near future,'' Russia's special presidential envoy for
    humanitarian cooperation with the CIS countries Dzhakhan Pollyyeva,
    who was elected as the Council's chairperson, told Itar-Tass.

    ``All the necessary legal documents were signed. The financing
    support of the projects is being coordinated,'' she said.

    ``The keen interest voiced by CIS representatives and their proposals
    showed that they view the fund as a source of new and broader
    possibilities and expressed the readiness to work jointly for the
    common benefit,'' Pollyyeva said.

    Chief of the Russian Federal Agency for Culture and Cinematography
    Mikhail Shvydkoy, who attended the meeting, believes that the main
    task of the fund is ``to provide young talents with broader
    possibilities for further growth.''

    ``It is necessary to start common projects in the spheres of museums,
    theatres, and music,'' he said.

    ``We are setting up a symphony orchestra jointly with the SIC Slavic
    countries. This will be the biggest project of 2007,'' he stressed,
    adding, ``We would like to draw in our Kazakh counterparts.
    Therefore, the orchestra may turn into the Eurasian Youth Symphony
    Orchestra.''

    ``We are going to establish a broad range of institutions and
    agencies, which will select talented young people from former Soviet
    republics and promote them on the markets of Eastern and Central
    Europe,'' Shvydkoy said, adding, ``We should do our utmost to give
    broader possibilities for young artists and scientists. We will find
    the starting capital, and then they can make money themselves.''

    ``We are lacking performers from Kazakhstan and Georgia. This is a
    good project, which is in demand on the market,'' he said.

    ``It is of huge importance to keep up a certain cultural balance, a
    balance of languages and humanitarian relations,'' Shvydkoy stressed.

    The second forum of CIS intellectuals due in Kazakhstan in autumn
    will be one of the most important events of this year.

    Participants in the Almaty meeting proposed to hold a forum of book
    publishers in Armenia and to focus on translators and interpreters
    activity in the CIS countries.

    They also offered to establish a databank of ideas for the joint
    production of films and to develop a program for preserving the CIS
    cultural variety and heritage.

    ``The top priority of the CIS Humanitarian Cooperation Council is to
    sustain and develop the cultural community of peoples that has formed
    over decades,'' famous Azerbaijani artist, the country's Ambassador
    to Russia Polad Bul-Bul ogly said at the meeting.
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