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Kazan Summit Reveals Rifts Among Former Soviet Countries
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(http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=EC4866:3919ACA

During recent meeting, leaders did not agree on a way forward for
loose confederation known as CIS





>From left, Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, Kazakh President
Nursultan Nazarbayev, Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian
President Viktor Yushchenko Leaders of 12 former republics of the
Soviet Union have not agreed on a way forward for the loose
confederation, known as the CIS, at a meeting held in the ancient city
of Kazan. The meeting revealed rifts following recent political shifts
in several of the member countries.

The central Russian city of Kazan in the mostly-Muslim Russian
republic of Tatarstan is holding a gala celebration marking the 1000th
anniversary of its founding.

Many visitors have arrived to take part in the festivities, which
included a gala concert.

Also attending are the 12 leaders of the former Soviet republics that
are part of what is called the Commonwealth of Independent States, or
CIS.

The CIS, which was formed as the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, has
long served as a means to discuss economic and political issues of the
now-independent countries that were once ruled with an iron hand from
Moscow.

Some of those states now seem reluctant to foster such close ties with
Moscow.

Ukraine, Georgia, Kyrgyzstan and the small southern republic of
Moldova have all elected more pro-reform governments in recent years,
and some say they may soon set up their own regional organization to
reflect the new reality.

Even Russian President Vladimir Putin seemed to acknowledge what this
means for the CIS. In a final statement at the end of the summit, he
said "the question of modernizing the CIS will be deep and very
difficult."

The leaders did sign agreements concerning the fight against terrorism
and how to deal with illegal immigration.

But the emerging differences within the bloc are increasingly clear,
according to Andrei Kortunov of the New Eurasian Foundation in Moscow.

"Indeed, there are a number of countries that tend to be more liberal,
more democratic and more reform-minded than others," he noted. "The
danger is, you have this split, and the split might have very serious
geopolitical and geoeconomic consequences."

Last week, Russia's foreign minister said Moscow may change its
long-standing policy of providing gas and oil at lower prices to other
CIS states, seen as a kind of warning to Ukraine, Georgia and Moldova.

Mr. Kortunov says, if this happens, it is likely to be implemented
gradually, and would reflect new international terms of trade.