DATE:
14/12/2007
Minsk - Russian President Vladimir Putin's Friday visit to Belarus will not produce a unification agreement between the two countries, the Belapan news agency reported citing a Kremlin official. The Russian leader arrived in Minsk, the capital of the former Soviet republic, on Thursday evening.
Russian and Belarusian media had widely predicted the main outcome of Friday talks scheduled between Putin and Belarusian leader Aleksander Lukashenko would be a treaty between the two countries setting a timetable for their unification.
The day's talks will in fact cover a "wide range" of issues between the two countries, but Belarus' becoming part of Russia is not even on the agenda, according to the report.
Putin and Lukashenko met on Thursday evening immediately after Putin's arrival for a short session of one-on-one talks at Lukashenko's official residence. It was the first visit by the Russian leader to Belarus since 2003.
The two leaders on Friday morning jointly chaired a meeting of High State Council (HSC) of Russia and Belarus, a bilateral agency responsible for coordinating trade, energy, and military policy between the two countries.
The main topic however was likely to be a possible "assistance credit" provided by Russia to Belarus to assist Minsk in paying for Russian energy imports.
The size of the credit, yet to be approved, has been reported at between 500 million and 1.5 billion dollars.
Other themes planned for delegation discussion throughout the day include the 2008 HSC budget, a memorandum on economic cooperation, and agreements on medical supplies trade, railroad tariffs, and banking.
Energy was another possible subject of talks, as the two countries' relationship has repeatedly become heated as a result of increasing Russian prices for oil and gas delivered to Belarus.
Russian oil shipments to Europe via Belarus came to a full halt early this year as a result of a failure between Moscow and Minsk to agree on pricing. Spot prices spiked across most of Eastern Europe as a result.
Russian energy giant Gazprom has taken an increasingly powerful stake in Belarus' gas transportation network during 2007, hiking gas prices to Belarus and then acquiring a 50 per cent holding in the Belarusian state-run gas pipeline network Beltransgaz for 2.5 billion dollars, needed by Minsk to pay for the gas.
Source:
http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/158628.html
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