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Russia To Control NATO Ulyanovsk Transit Base - Lavrov

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  • Russia To Control NATO Ulyanovsk Transit Base - Lavrov

    RUSSIA TO CONTROL NATO ULYANOVSK TRANSIT BASE - LAVROV
    Lyubov Chilikova

    RIA Novosti
    05/04/2012

    Protest against plans to establish a NATO transit base at Ulyanovsk
    airport

    The projected Ulyanovsk transit base for NATO supplies to and from
    Afghanistan will remain under Russian customs control and will have
    no NATO civil or military personnel, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei
    Lavrov said on Thursday.

    The U.S. wants to set up a transit supply base for NATO in order to
    facilitate the withdrawal of NATO forces from the international ISAF
    contingent in Afghanistan in 2013-14.

    "It will take place under full customs control of the Russian
    Federation," Lavrov said. "No military or civil personnel from NATO
    will be there, only Russian customs and Russian companies working in
    it," he said at a press conference during his visit to Kyrgyzstan.

    Russian forces may also check all freight transiting through the
    country for drugs, as Russia has been hit hard by heroin production
    in Central Asia, Deputy Foreign Minister Alexander Grushko said.

    President Medvedev has called Afghan drugs a threat to Russia's
    security.

    "Russia pays especial attention to security measures, so we have an
    agreement with NATO that all transit goods travelling through our
    territory may be subject to additional checks, including for drugs,"
    Grushko told RIA Novosti.

    There are about five million drugs users in Russia, the country's
    drugs control chief Viktor Ivanov said in Decemeber.

    Russia allows NATO to transport non-military supplies for its operation
    in Afghanistan by rail and by air.

    Grushko said Russia had no current plans to allow the United States
    and other NATO member states to use a Russian air base in the Volga
    city of Ulyanovsk as a hub for transits to and from Afghanistan.

    "There will be no hub in Ulyanovsk. We are talking about temporary
    depots needed for the storage and subsequent loading of aircraft
    with non-lethal goods for shipment to the International Security
    Assistance Force," Grushko said, adding that the shipments were
    "strictly commercial."

    Last month, NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said the
    bloc had "no intention of establishing a base in Russia."

    "This is a pragmatic arrangement which allows us to transport
    non-lethal supplies and troops to benefit our operation in
    Afghanistan," he said in a video link-up with RIA Novosti.

    The decision provoked protests in Ulyanovsk, the birthplace of
    Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin.

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