DEC. 27 2013 (The Conway Bulletin) — More usually described as unilateral, Uzbekistan has taken a step towards being more collegiate towards its neighbours.
Uzbek President Islam Karimov signed a law on joining a free trade agreement among nine members of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS).
Uzbekistan originally signed a protocol on the free trade deal at a session of heads of CIS governments in Minsk, Belarus, on May 31 2013 and had been waiting for Mr Karimov’s signature to ratify it.
By joining the agreement Uzbekistan will drop import and export fees on goods to and from other member states. Of the eight other countries that signed the free trade deal in 2013 Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Moldova, Russia and Ukraine have already put it into operation. Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan are still waiting to ratify it.
President Karimov has been keen to distance himself from the CIS in general and Moscow in particular but signing the agreement does bring Tashkent closer to the Kremlin.
Uzbekistan is expected to benefit from the agreement. What this move doesn’t mean, and this is important, is that relations with the West have weakened in any way. The free trade deal is important mainly for Uzbekistan’s exports and not for its geo-political trajectory.
ENDS
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(News report from Issue No. 166, published on Jan. 8 2014)