November 28, 2006
CIS: Heads Of State Order Overhaul Of Commonwealth
The CIS presidents assembling today in Minsk (ITAR-TASS)
MINSK, November 28, 2006 (RFE/RL) -- Today's summit of the Commonwealth of Independent States brought no great revelations -- just a pledge from the gathered heads of state to push for reforming the largely ineffectual 15-year-old body.
Year after year, officials at CIS summits seem to spend more time questioning the body's existence than advancing its agenda as the largest post-Soviet regional grouping.
This year's summit, in the Belarusian capital Minsk, was no different.
No Cause Celebre
With the CIS about to celebrate the 15th anniversary of its creation on December 8, talk was not about celebration -- just reformation.
The summit's host, President Alyaksandr Lukashenka, opened today's summit with warm words about the CIS. But, he added, the grouping was far from perfect.
"It must be acknowledged that some of our goals have not been met," Lukashenka told the assembled heads of state."
This does not mean that they have lost their relevance. We should work more actively in deepening integration, developing economic cooperation, first and foremost, and collectively safeguarding the social rights and guarantees of CIS citizens."
The CIS was established in 1991 with the goal of replacing the defunct USSR with a working economic alliance that would keep the neighborhood stable in the political aftermath of the Soviet collapse.
But the grouping has never found its footing. Meanwhile, other regional bodies like GUAM and the Collective Security Treaty Organization have gained greater momentum. Some began to wonder if it was time for the CIS to disband.
Russian President Putin (center) and Foreign Minister Lavrov (right) arriving in Minsk today (RFE/RL)
Summit participants appeared to have other plans. Nursultan Nazarbaev, the president of Kazakhstan, said today that CIS leaders had ordered their foreign ministers to submit a proposal for reforming the grouping by June 1, 2007.