News (Media Awareness Project) - Moldava: Wire: Ex-Soviet Leaders Agree On Crime |
Title: | Moldava: Wire: Ex-Soviet Leaders Agree On Crime |
Published On: | 2002-10-07 |
Source: | Associated Press (Wire) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-21 23:09:45 |
EX-SOVIET LEADERS AGREE ON CRIME
CHISINAU, Moldova - Russian President Vladimir Putin and the leaders of 10
other former Soviet republics met Monday to agree on ways to improve joint
crime-fighting, including strengthening borders and combatting the illegal
drug trade.
On the eve of the summit of the Commonwealth of Independent States, Putin
held bilateral meetings with seven of his counterparts.
In the most closely watched meeting, he and Georgian President Eduard
Shevardnadze called a time-out in a venomous dispute over alleged Georgian
aid to Chechen rebels. Putin said he had received a pledge that Georgia
would no longer hold up extradition of a group of Chechens who are wanted
in Russia, and the two agreed that their border guards should increase
cooperation, up to joint patrols, to prevent rebel incursions.
Asked Monday if Russia was still planning to unleash its own air strikes on
Georgian territory as Putin had threatened in September, the Russian leader
said, "Those declarations, I hope, will not be realized if yesterday's
agreement with the Georgian president is put into practice."
"There are no obstacles to putting into practice what we agreed," he said.
Sunday's meeting between the two leaders was their first since a war of
words broke out this summer over the presence of Chechen rebels and other
militants in northern Georgia, on the Russian border. The quarrel, years in
the making, came to a head after a group of dozens of alleged Chechen
rebels broke through the border and battled Russian border guards, killing
eight.
Putin and his subordinates had threatened the strikes, saying that Russia
had a right to act in self-defense. But Shevardnadze's aides accused Moscow
of using the anti-terrorist campaign as a ruse to destabilize its southern
neighbor.
Monday's summit was equally as friendly, with a few hours of formal
meetings capped by a visit to the Cricova wine cellars in the outskirts of
Chisinau. The formal agenda included discussions of the joint fight against
terrorism, separatism and drugs, and the informal program was to include
greetings to Putin, who was celebrating his 50th birthday.
The meeting was also expected to hammer out a common position on Iraq and
consider the creation of an anti-terrorist center in Central Asia.
While it is nominally a group of equals, the 11-year-old Commonwealth is
also an instrument of Russian policy in the former Soviet region. Moscow is
working particularly to win back influence in Central Asia, where the
United States has stationed troops as part of the anti-terrorist campaign
and significantly increased economic aid.
The ITAR-Tass news agency reported that Russia is seeking agreement to a
policy of no direct or indirect involvement by Commonwealth states in a
possible U.S.-led military operation against Iraq.
The Commonwealth was formed to coordinate cooperation between the countries
emerging when the Soviet Union dissolved in 1991 and to prevent the anarchy
that many top officials feared.
Turkmen President Saparmurat Niyazov was the only no-show at the summit.
His Central Asian nation has declared a policy of strict neutrality and it
regularly skips Commonwealth meetings.
CHISINAU, Moldova - Russian President Vladimir Putin and the leaders of 10
other former Soviet republics met Monday to agree on ways to improve joint
crime-fighting, including strengthening borders and combatting the illegal
drug trade.
On the eve of the summit of the Commonwealth of Independent States, Putin
held bilateral meetings with seven of his counterparts.
In the most closely watched meeting, he and Georgian President Eduard
Shevardnadze called a time-out in a venomous dispute over alleged Georgian
aid to Chechen rebels. Putin said he had received a pledge that Georgia
would no longer hold up extradition of a group of Chechens who are wanted
in Russia, and the two agreed that their border guards should increase
cooperation, up to joint patrols, to prevent rebel incursions.
Asked Monday if Russia was still planning to unleash its own air strikes on
Georgian territory as Putin had threatened in September, the Russian leader
said, "Those declarations, I hope, will not be realized if yesterday's
agreement with the Georgian president is put into practice."
"There are no obstacles to putting into practice what we agreed," he said.
Sunday's meeting between the two leaders was their first since a war of
words broke out this summer over the presence of Chechen rebels and other
militants in northern Georgia, on the Russian border. The quarrel, years in
the making, came to a head after a group of dozens of alleged Chechen
rebels broke through the border and battled Russian border guards, killing
eight.
Putin and his subordinates had threatened the strikes, saying that Russia
had a right to act in self-defense. But Shevardnadze's aides accused Moscow
of using the anti-terrorist campaign as a ruse to destabilize its southern
neighbor.
Monday's summit was equally as friendly, with a few hours of formal
meetings capped by a visit to the Cricova wine cellars in the outskirts of
Chisinau. The formal agenda included discussions of the joint fight against
terrorism, separatism and drugs, and the informal program was to include
greetings to Putin, who was celebrating his 50th birthday.
The meeting was also expected to hammer out a common position on Iraq and
consider the creation of an anti-terrorist center in Central Asia.
While it is nominally a group of equals, the 11-year-old Commonwealth is
also an instrument of Russian policy in the former Soviet region. Moscow is
working particularly to win back influence in Central Asia, where the
United States has stationed troops as part of the anti-terrorist campaign
and significantly increased economic aid.
The ITAR-Tass news agency reported that Russia is seeking agreement to a
policy of no direct or indirect involvement by Commonwealth states in a
possible U.S.-led military operation against Iraq.
The Commonwealth was formed to coordinate cooperation between the countries
emerging when the Soviet Union dissolved in 1991 and to prevent the anarchy
that many top officials feared.
Turkmen President Saparmurat Niyazov was the only no-show at the summit.
His Central Asian nation has declared a policy of strict neutrality and it
regularly skips Commonwealth meetings.
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