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Leaders of ex-Soviet republics meet in Moscow

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  • Leaders of ex-Soviet republics meet in Moscow

    Leaders of ex-Soviet republics meet in Moscow
    By HENRY MEYER

    AP Worldstream
    May 08, 2005

    Russian President Vladimir Putin told leaders of the Commonwealth
    of Independent States on Sunday that their grouping of ex-Soviet
    republics remained relevant today.

    "It's precisely because of our efforts that the U.N. General Assembly
    proclaimed May 8 and 9 the day of reconciliation and memory, and
    called on states to unite their efforts to combat the successors of
    Nazism, terrorism, and also ideological doctrines based on racism
    and xenophobia," Putin said.

    "I'm convinced that the CIS is capable of becoming an effective
    instrument of such ... work."

    He said that six decades after the end of what Russia terms the Great
    Patriotic War, the fraternity the peoples of the Soviet Union felt
    as they fought in World War II was still palpable today. Maintaining
    "historical unity" was a good basis for stable development of the
    countries, he said.

    The meeting convened amid growing questions about the viability
    of the CIS, which brings together leaders of ex-Soviet republics
    with increasingly diametric views of how their countries and their
    region should develop following the uprisings against the entrenched
    leaderships of Georgia, Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan.

    In a reflection of the disputes between the member-countries, two of
    the leaders, Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili and Azerbaijani
    President Ilham Aliev, were not attending.

    Saakashvili was staying away from Sunday's meeting, as well as Monday's
    Victory in Europe Day celebration in Moscow, because Georgia failed
    to win agreement last week on the withdrawal of Russian bases.

    Aliev was boycotting because of the attendance of Armenian President
    Robert Kocharian, and because Sunday is a day of mourning, marking
    a key battle during the six-year war between Armenia and Azerbaijan
    over the disputed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    The CIS was born in the collapse of the Soviet Union, and its advocates
    hoped it would foster closer integration between the newly independent
    countries. However, many of its initiatives have foundered _ including
    the plans to remove trade barriers that have dominated the CIS agenda
    since its creation _ and it has long been criticized for being little
    more than a talking shop.

    The group's attempts to prove otherwise have often only fostered more
    discord. Its peacekeepers have been accused of destabilizing conflict
    zones in the former Soviet Union, and its election monitors _ deployed
    to provide a counterbalance to Western-dominated observer missions
    from such groups as the Council of Europe and the Organization for
    Security and Cooperation in Europe _ have consistently given high
    marks to blatantly fraudulent ballots.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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