Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Odd mix of ex-Soviet rulers meet, some stay away

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Odd mix of ex-Soviet rulers meet, some stay away

    Odd mix of ex-Soviet rulers meet, some stay away
    By Jonathan Thatcher

    Reuters, UK
    May 7 2005

    MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russian President Vladimir Putin on Sunday hosts
    leaders of an ill-assorted alliance of former Soviet states, kicking
    off three days of summits and glittering parties he hopes will lift
    his international image.

    The high point of the May 8-10 ceremonies will be Monday's 60th
    anniversary of the Soviet defeat of Nazi Germany in World War Two,
    attended by over 50 leaders, among them U.S. President George W. Bush
    and German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder.

    The gatherings come after stinging criticism by the United States of
    what it sees as Putin's excessively strong grip on power and concerns
    over the risks of investing in Russia rooted in uncertainty over the
    application of laws.

    Russia itself has had to watch its influence, in a region where it
    once held absolute sway, steadily erode as former colonies shift their
    allegiance from Moscow and towards a welcoming and more financially
    alluring West.

    The Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) joins 12 of the 15 old
    Soviet republics, stretching from Central Asia on the border with
    China to the edge of the European Union, with a combined population
    of 280 million -- half of it in Russia.

    They are ruled by an unlikely mix of leaders, most of whom trace
    their political roots to the Soviet days and who rose to power in
    elections internationally criticised as flawed at best.

    At one end of the political spectrum are the autocratic rulers of much
    of Central Asia, including Turkmenistan's President Saparmurat Niyazov
    who has built up a bizarre personality cult, and Belarus's Alexander
    Lukashenko who heads what Washington calls Europe's last dictatorship.

    Most have made plain that they will not ease their grip and allow the
    'people power' revolutions that brought pro-Western leaders to office
    in Georgia and Ukraine.

    Tiny Moldova too is slipping out of Russia's orbit with its president,
    Vladimir Voronin, and the only official communist leader in the CIS,
    saying he wants greater integration with the West.

    Georgia will be the last port of call for Bush on his tour of the
    region which began in the Baltic states, also once part of the Kremlin
    empire but which as EU members now are pressing Moscow to atone for
    decades of Soviet oppression.

    It will confirm Kremlin alarm that Washington is stepping a little too
    eagerly into its former domain. On Saturday, Bush rubbed salt into
    the wound by saying the Baltic states were an example of democracy
    for Russia.

    GEORGIAN LEADER BOYCOTTS PARTY

    Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili -- who came to power in the
    'Rose Revolution' in late 2003 -- is boycotting the Moscow festivities
    after failing to reach a deal late last week with Russia to quickly
    dismantle Soviet-era bases on Georgian soil that he calls a form
    of occupation.

    Azeri President Ilham Aliyev is also staying at home rather than
    meet Armenian leader Robert Kocharyan on May 8 which is also the
    anniversary of a decisive defeat of Azeri forces in the war over
    Nagorno-Karabakh, one of the bloodiest conflicts to erupt in the
    dying days of the Soviet Union.

    But Ukraine's President Viktor Yushchenko, who came to power in the
    last 'Orange Revolution' and defeated the candidate openly backed by
    Putin, will attend the CIS meeting.

    Putin, who dismisses suggestions that the group is an attempt by the
    Kremlin to hang on to past glory, says the CIS still has value.

    "(It is) a very important instrument that helps us to exchange
    information, to solve common political, humanitarian and administrative
    problems. We ... must not lose this," he said recently.

    A key goal of the CIS has been to try to resume trade ties and
    recreate what it calls a single economic space but latest statistics
    show that the group accounts for just 17 percent of Russia's exports
    and 21 percent of its imports.
Working...
X