<DIV><BR><BR><B><I>Grant Lee <grantlee@iinet.net.au></I></B> wrote:
<BLOCKQUOTE class=replbq style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #1010ff 2px solid">
<P>Chris said:<BR><BR>> I do think a community of post-Soviet states will exist; it will simply<BR>not be like the EU. It will be Moscow-dominated and Russocentric (like<BR>> the USSR and the Russian Empire)."<BR><BR>OK, my mistake. But what price/s (economic or otherwise) will Russia have to<BR>pay, to get the other ex-Soviet states to sign off on some kind of economic<BR>community?</P>
<P>I write:</P>
<P>Ukraine, Russia ratify post-Soviet economic union<BR>By Olena Horodetska<BR><BR>KIEV, April 20 (Reuters) - Russia and Ukraine ratified membership of an <BR>economic union on Tuesday, despite protests in Ukraine where the opposition <BR>says the deal is an attempt by Moscow to reassert its former imperial power.<BR><BR>The union, creating a common tax code and a customs union ending trade <BR>tariffs, is also intended to include Belarus and Kazakhstan, which have yet <BR>to ratify the arrangements.<BR><BR>In the Ukrainian parliament, the opposition boycotted the vote but <BR>ratification still passed easily; 265 lawmakers in the 450-seat chamber <BR>voting in favour.<BR><BR>In the Russian Duma, where President Vladimir Putin's supporters have a big <BR>majority of the 450 seats, support was overwhelming; 408 voted in favour.<BR><BR>The plan was signed by the presidents of the four former Soviet republics <BR>last year. Kazakhstan will vote on Wednesday. Belarus says its parliament,
<BR>which rarely contradicts President Alexander Lukashenko, plans to consider <BR>approval soon.<BR><BR>The four have a combined population of about 225 million -- nearly 150 <BR>million of them in Russia and 50 million in Ukraine.<BR><BR>Ukrainian officials said the union was key to sustaining economic growth <BR>once the European Union expands to Ukraine's western borders on May 1, <BR>raising new barriers to its exports.<BR><BR>"The main aim of a common economic space is to make Ukraine's economy more <BR>competitive," Finance Minister Mykola Azarov said as he presented the document.<BR><BR>KIEV CRITICS<BR><BR>The opposition criticised the document as an attempt to weaken the <BR>independence Ukraine won from Moscow in 1991.<BR><BR>"We are betraying the Ukrainian people," Oleh Tyagnybok, a member of <BR>parliament from the opposition party Our Ukraine, said. "Russia, whether it <BR>was under the tsars or under the soviets, has always tried to suppress <BR>Ukraine."<BR><BR>About
3,000 people rallied outside parliament during the vote, waving <BR>Ukraine's blue and yellow flag and nationalist banners reading "No to <BR>Union, No to the Return of the USSR."<BR><BR>The neighbours have a long history of rivalry.<BR><BR>In Moscow, opposition Communists and the Fatherland party staged a walkout <BR>after ratification when the Duma voted to ratify two border agreements with <BR>Ukraine. They accused Kiev of discriminating against Ukraine's millions of <BR>Russian speakers.<BR><BR>There have been several attempts to form economic unions among former <BR>Soviet states struggling to boost their economies and win new markets after <BR>a regional financial crisis in 1998. Significant results, however, are hard <BR>to discern.<BR><BR>(Additional reporting by Douglas Busvine in Moscow)<BR></P></BLOCKQUOTE></DIV><p>
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