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Belarus Dashes Veshnyakov's CIS Hopes |
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Thursday, 04 October 2007 |
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Former
chairman of the Russian Central Elections Committee Alexander Veshnyakov's
candidacy for executive secretary of the Commonwealth of Independent States
will not be discussed at the CIS summit in Dushanbe tomorrow because Belarus
remains opposed to his appointment to that post. A consensus is required for
the appointment. Moscow's plan to replace current CIS head and former Russian
interior minister Vladimir Rushailo with Veshnyakov became known in June but
his candidacy was not discussed at the summit in St. Petersburg that month.
Veshnyakov may be offered an ambassadorial post in Europe instead.
Belarusian
President Alexander Lukashenko told Russian
President Vladimir Putin and Kazakh President Noursultan Nazarbaev
in St. Petersburg that he was categorically opposed to Veshnyakov's
appointment. Efforts to sway the Belarusian leader have been unsuccessful.
Members of the Russian CEC suggested in unofficial
conversations with Kommersant
that the cause for Lukashenko's opposition was probably the observers'
delegation Veshnyakov led during the Belarusian presidential elections of 2002.
Although the Russian delegation gave the elections a positive assessment,
unlike all Western delegations, Veshnyakov noted that individual Belarusian
presidential orders could be interpreted as violating the CIS convention on
elections. Veshnyakov was personally instrumental in establishing that
convention. At the time of the elections, Belarus was the only CIS member state
that had not ratified it. The Belarusian presidential press service declined to
comment on the issue.
www.kommersant.com
www.kommersant.com |