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EU SIGNS ACCORDS WITH THREE CAUCASUS NATIONS
Baku Sun, November 16, 2006
BRUSSELS, Belgium - The European Union on Tuesday offered Georgia, Azerbaijan and Armenia millions of euros (dollars) in economic aid and easier access to EU markets in return for the promise of political and democratic reforms. The EU signed so-called European Neighborhood accords with the three countries, which will draw them closer to the bloc, but offers no perspective of membership.
"These agreements will boost our relationship," EU External Relations Commissioner Benita Ferrero-Waldner said. The deals seek to stabilize Europe's eastern borders as it expands to 27 members on Jan. 1, when Romania and Bulgaria join. The EU says human rights and democratic are essential elements of such deals.
The accords offers broad EU cooperation in economic and justice affairs, transport, energy, environment, research, education, health and other sectors.
They aim to craft a "ring of friends" - eventually embracing Israel, Jordan.
Egypt. Lebanon, Moldova, Morocco, the Palestinians, Tunisia and Ukraine - and offer them easy access to the EU's vast internal market if they stay the course on reforms.
The EU sees the neighborhood accords as an opportunity to help settle frozen conflicts in the south Caucasus and help nations there normalize frayed ties with Russia.
The EU is concerned about poor relations between Russia and Georgia and the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh between Armenia and Azerbaijan.
The final status of Nagorno-Karabakh
has not been worked out. Years of talks under the auspices of international mediators have brought few visible results.
On Monday, the EU said they will not recognize a weekend referendum vole result backing independence for Georgia's breakaway province of South Ossetia. Election officials in South Ossetia said voters in the disputed region had approved independence for the tiny Caucasus Mountains province on Russia's border, which split off from Georgian central government control in a bloody 1990s war.
PRESIDENT BARROSO AND THE PRESIDENT OF AZERBAIJAN SIGN A MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING ON ENERGY PARTNERSHIP
EU'S BARROSO PRAISES AZERBAIJAN AS KEY ALLY
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December 2006, Issue No. 44
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AZERBAIJANI ANSWER TO OIL GLUT: BATHE IN IT
International Herald Tribune, November 28, 2006
NAFTALAN, Azerbaijan: Outside this improbable spa in a remote part of the former Soviet Union, oil rigs bob on a hardscrabble plain of rocks, shrubs and rusting industrial equipment that could easily pass for a stretch of West Texas.
Inside, Ramil Mutukhov, a lanky 25- year-old, prepares to be pampered and preened, scrubbed and peeled in a bath of pure crude oil. He undresses, hangs his trousers and sweatshirt on a peg, pulls off socks and underwear and folds up a wad of brown paper towels. He will need those later.
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