MOSCOW — The presidents of Russia, Belarus and Kazakhstan approved on Tuesday a âroadmapâ to Armeniaâs accession to their Customs Union which a senior Russian official said should be completed by next May.
Speaking at the Supreme Eurasian Economic Council summit held in Moscow, Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev at the same time expressed reservations about Armenian membership related to the unresolved Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.
âThe question of the Custom Unionâs border, where it will pass in Armenia, remains open. Therefore, we will sign the roadmap with the colleagues but with a special opinion that will be reported [to the Armenian side],â Nazarbayev said.
Nazarbayev referred to Armeniaâs border with the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic and the absence of any Armenian customs posts there. Armenian leaders have assured the domestic public that they will not tax goods coming from Karabakh even after joining the Russian-led trade bloc. Some of them have implied that Moscow has promised to turn a blind eye to what would be a breach of the unionâs common trade rules.
Nazarbayev clearly feels more strongly about Azerbaijanâs territorial integrity. As recently as on August 16, he backed a Karabakh settlement âwithin Azerbaijanâs internationally recognized bordersâ in a joint declaration adopted at a summit of Turkic-speaking states in Azerbaijan.
The Kazakh leader did not clarify whether putting customs checkpoints on Armenian roads leading to Karabakh is a necessary condition for Armenian entry into the Customs Union.
The heads of the unionâs three member states were joined by President Serzh Sarkisian, his Kyrgyz counterpart Almazbek Atambayev and Ukraineâs Prime Minister Mykola Azarov at a separate session held later in the day. Putin did not comment on the sensitive Karabakh issue as he spoke at that meeting. He praised instead âthe high degree of preparedness of our Armenian partners for the adoption of obligations within the framework of our integration project.â
âThe presidents signed the roadmap to Armeniaâs accession to the Customs Union and determined time frames,â Russiaâs First Deputy Prime Minister Igor Shuvalov told reporters afterwards. âArmenia stated that it will be seeking to shorten those time frames.â
âWe believe we will need half a year to conduct all inspections and see how prepared Armeniaâs institutions are for this reorganization and receive a guarantee that they are adequate Customs Union institutions,â Shuvalov said.
Dozens of Armenian economic laws and regulations are due to be amended and brought into conformity with the unionâs legislation as a result. This process should be complete in time for the trade blocâs transformation into a Eurasian Economic Union of ex-Soviet states seen by Kremlin critics as an attempt to recreate the Soviet Union. Sarkisian plans to make Armenia part of that union as well.
Putin announced on Tuesday that he, Nazarbayev and Lukashenko worked out âthe key principlesâ of the Eurasian Unionâs founding treaty and plan to sign it by May 1, 2014. âThe treaty will then be submitted to the parliaments of our countries for ratification so that the Eurasian Economic Union can start functioning in full from January 1, 2015,â he said.
âRoadmapâ to Armeniaâs Accession to the Customs Union Approved
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