Commonwealth of Independent States

Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS)

Содружество Независимых Государств (СНГ)
Sodruzhestvo Nezavisimykh Gosudarstv (SNG)
�����Member states�����Former member state (Georgia)�����Participant state (Ukraine)�����Associate state (Turkmenistan)
     Member states     Former member state (Georgia)     Participant state (Ukraine)     Associate state (Turkmenistan)
Administrative center Minsk
Largest city Moscow
Working language Russian
Membership
Government Commonwealth
 -  Executive Secretary Russia Sergei Lebedev
 -  Presidency  Russia
Establishment 21 December 1991
 -  CST 15 May 1992 
 -  CISFTA signed 1994[1] 
 -  CISFTA established 19 September 2003[2] 
Area
 -  Total 22,100,843 km2 
8,533,183 sq mi 
Population
 -  2008 estimate 276,917,629 
 -  Density 12.53/km2 
32.5/sq mi
GDP (PPP) 2007 estimate
 -  Total $2,906.944 billion 
 -  Per capita $10,498 
GDP (nominal) 2007 estimate
 -  Total $1,691.861 billion 
 -  Per capita $6,110 
Currency
Time zone (UTC+2 to +12)
Website
http://www.cis.minsk.by/
1 Founding countries
2 Has not ratified the charter
3 Associate member
4 Georgia was an official member from 1994 to 2009

The Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) (Russian: Содружество Независимых Государств, СНГ, tr. Sodruzhestvo Nezavisimykh Gosudarstv, SNG) is a regional organization whose participating countries are former Soviet Republics, formed during the breakup of the Soviet Union.

The CIS is comparable to a very loose association of states and in no way comparable to a federation, confederation or supra-national organisation such as the old European Community. It is more comparable to the Commonwealth of Nations. Although the CIS has few supranational powers, it is more than a purely symbolic organization, possessing coordinating powers in the realm of trade, finance, lawmaking, and security. It has also promoted cooperation on democratization and cross-border crime prevention. As a regional organization, CIS participates in UN peacekeeping forces.[3] Some of the members of the CIS have established the Eurasian Economic Community with the aim of creating a full-fledged common market.

Contents

History

The organization was founded on 8 December 1991 by the Republic of Belarus, the Russian Federation, and Ukraine, when the leaders of the three countries met in the Belovezhskaya Pushcha Natural Reserve, about 50 km (30 miles) north of Brest in Belarus and signed a Creation Agreement (Russian: Соглашение, Soglasheniye) on the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the creation of CIS as a successor entity to the USSR.[4] At the same time they announced that the new alliance would be open to all republics of the former Soviet Union, as well as other nations sharing the same goals. The CIS charter stated that all the members were sovereign and independent nations and thereby effectively abolished the Soviet Union.

On 21 December 1991, the leaders of eight additional Soviet Republics – Armenia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan – agreed to join the CIS, thus bringing the number of participating countries to 11.[5] Georgia joined two years later, in December 1993.[6] As of that time, 12 of the 15 former Soviet Republics participated in the CIS. Three former Soviet Republics, the Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, chose not to join.

In March 2007, Igor Ivanov, the secretary of the Russian Security Council, expressed his doubts concerning the usefulness of CIS, and emphasizing that the Eurasian Economic Community became a more competent organization to unify the biggest countries of the CIS.[7] In May 2009 the six countries Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine joined the Eastern Partnership, a project which was initiated by the European Union (EU).

Military structures

When Boris Yeltsin became Russian Defence Minister on 7 May 1992, Yevgeny Shaposhnikov, the man appointed as Commander-in-Chief of the CIS Armed Forces, and his staff, were ejected from the MOD and General Staff buildings and given offices in the former Warsaw Pact Headquarters at 41 Leningradsky Prospekt[8] on the northern outskirts of Moscow.[9] Shaposhnikov resigned in June 1993.

In December 1993, the CIS Armed Forces Headquarters was abolished.[10] Instead, 'the CIS Council of Defence Ministers created a CIS Military Cooperation Coordination Headquarters (MCCH) in Moscow, with 50 per cent of the funding provided by Russia.'[11] General Viktor Samsonov was appointed as Chief of Staff.

Membership status of CIS countries

The Creation Agreement remained the main constituent document of the CIS until January 1993, when the CIS Charter (Russian: Устав, Ustav) was adopted.[12] The charter formalized the concept of membership: a member country is defined as a country that ratifies the CIS Charter (sec. 2, art. 7). Turkmenistan has not ratified the charter and changed its CIS standing to associate member as of 26 August 2005 in order to be consistent with its UN-recognized international neutrality status.[13][14] Although Ukraine was one of the three founding countries and ratified the Creation Agreement in December 1991, Ukraine did not choose to ratify the CIS Charter and is not a member of the CIS[6][15].

Country Signed Ratified Charter ratified Membership Status
 Armenia 21 December 1991 18 February 1992 16 March 1994 official member
 Azerbaijan 21 December 1991 24 September 1993 14 December 1993 official member
 Belarus 8 December 1991 10 December 1991 18 January 1994 official member
 Kazakhstan 21 December 1991 23 December 1991 20 April 1994 official member
 Kyrgyzstan 21 December 1991 6 March 1992 12 April 1994 official member
 Moldova 21 December 1991 8 April 1994 27 June 1994 official member
 Russia 8 December 1991 12 December 1991 20 July 1993 official member
 Tajikistan 21 December 1991 26 June 1993 4 August 1993 official member
 Turkmenistan 21 December 1991 26 December 1991 Not ratified unofficial associate member
 Ukraine 8 December 1991 10 December 1991 Not ratified de facto participating; officially not a member
 Uzbekistan 21 December 1991 1 April 1992 9 February 1994 official member

Between the years of 2003 and 2005, three CIS member states experienced a change of government in a series of colour revolutions: Eduard Shevardnadze was overthrown in Georgia, Viktor Yushchenko was elected in Ukraine, and, lastly, Askar Akayev was toppled in Kyrgyzstan. In February 2006, Georgia officially withdrew from the Council of Defense Ministers, with the statement that "Georgia has taken a course to join NATO and it cannot be part of two military structures simultaneously",[16][17] but it remained a full member of the CIS until August 2009, one year after officially withdrawing in the immediate aftermath of the 2008 South Ossetia war.

Former members

Country Signed Ratified Charter ratified Withdrawn Effective
 Georgia 3 December 1993 19 April 1994 18 August 2008 17 August 2009

Following the South Ossetian war in 2008, President Saakashvili announced during a public speech in the capital city Tbilisi that Georgia would leave the CIS[18] and the Georgian Parliament voted unanimously (on 14 August 2008) to withdraw from the regional organization.[19] On 18 August 2008 the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Georgia sent a note to the CIS Executive Committee notifying it of the aforesaid resolutions of the Parliament of Georgia and Georgia’s withdrawal from CIS.[20] In accordance with the CIS Charter (sec. 1, art. 9),[12] Georgia's withdrawal came into effect 12 months later, on 18 August 2009.[21][22]

Executive Secretaries of CIS

Meeting of CIS leaders in Bishkek in 2008
Name Country Term
Ivan Korotchenya  Belarus 26 December 1991 - 29 April 1998
Boris Berezovsky  Russia 29 April 1998 - 4 March 1999
Ivan Korotchenya (acting)  Belarus 4 March - 2 April 1999
Yury Yarov  Russia 2 April 1999 - 14 June 2004
Vladimir Rushailo  Russia 14 June 2004 - 5 October 2007
Sergei Lebedev  Russia since 5 October 2007

Recent events

Following the withdrawal of Georgia, the presidents of Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, and Turkmenistan skipped the Oct 2009 meeting of the CIS.[23]

Eurasian Economic Community

The Eurasian Economic Community (EurAsEC or EAEC) originated from a customs union between Belarus, Russia and Kazakhstan on the 29 March 1996.[24] It was named EEC on 10 October 2000[25] when Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, and Tajikistan signed the treaty. EurAsEC was formally created when the treaty was finally ratified by all five member states in May 2001. Armenia, Moldova and Ukraine have the observer status. EurAsEC is working on establishing a common energy market and exploring the more efficient use of water in central Asia.

Organization of Central Asian Cooperation

Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan formed the OCAC in 1991 as Central Asian Commonwealth (CAC). The organization continued in 1994 as Central Asian Economic Union (CAEU), in which Tajikistan and Turkmenistan did not participate. In 1998 it became Central Asian Economic Cooperation (CAEC), which marked the return of Tajikistan. On 28 February 2002 it was renamed to its current name. Russia joined on 28 May 2004.[26] On 7 October 2005 it was decided between the member states that Uzbekistan will join[27] the Eurasian Economic Community and that the organizations will merge.[28] The organizations joined on 25 January 2006. It is not clear what will happen to the status of current CACO observers that are not observers to EurAsEC (Georgia and Turkey).

Common Economic Space

After discussion about the creation of a common economic space between the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) countries of Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, and Kazakhstan, agreement in principle about the creation of this space was announced after a meeting in the Moscow suburb of Novo-Ogarevo on 23 February 2003. The Common Economic Space would involve a supranational commission on trade and tariffs that would be based in Kiev, would initially be headed by a representative of Kazakhstan, and would not be subordinate to the governments of the four nations. The ultimate goal would be a regional organisation that would be open for other countries to join as well, and could eventually lead even to a single currency.

On 22 May 2003 The Verkhovna Rada (the Ukrainian Parliament) voted 266 votes in favour and 51 against the joint economic space. However, most believe that Viktor Yushchenko's victory in the Ukrainian presidential election of 2004 was a significant blow against the project: Yushchenko has shown renewed interest in Ukrainian membership in the European Union, and such membership would be incompatible with the envisioned common economic space. Yushchenko's successor Viktor Yanukovych stated on April 27, 2010 "Ukraine's entry into the Customs Union of Russia, Belarus and Kazakhstan is not possible today, since the economic principles and the laws of the WTO do not allow it, we develop our policy in accordance with WTO principles".[29] Ukraine is a WTO member.[29]

The creation of a common economic space for Russia, Kazakhstan, and Belarus may be launched on 1 January 2010.[30]

Economic data

     EAEC members     GUAM members     Other CIS members

The data is taken from the UN Statistics Division.

Country Population (2007) GDP 2006 (USD) GDP 2007 (USD) growth (2007) per capita (2007)
Belarus 9,724,163 36,961,815,474 45,275,738,770 8.6% 4,656
Kazakhstan 15,408,161 81,003,864,916 104,849,915,344 8.7% 6,805
Kyrgyzstan 5,346,111 2,834,168,893 3,802,570,572 8.5% 711
Russia 141,941,200 989,427,936,676 1,294,381,844,081 8.1% 9,119
Tajikistan 6,727,377 2,142,328,846 2,265,340,888 3.0% 337
Uzbekistan 26,900,365 17,077,480,575 22,355,214,805 9.5% 831
EAEC total 207,033,990 1,125,634,333,117 1,465,256,182,498 30.17% 7,077
Azerbaijan 8,631,512 20,981,929,498 33,049,426,816 25.1% 3,829
Georgia 4,357,857 7,745,249,284 10,172,920,422 12.3% 2,334
Moldova 3,667,469 3,408,283,313 4,401,137,824 3.0% 1,200
Ukraine 46,289,475 107,753,069,307 142,719,009,901 7.9% 3,083
GUAM total 62,861,573 139,888,538,550 186,996,463,870 33.68% 2,975
Armenia 3,072,450 6,384,452,551 9,204,496,419 13.8% 2,996
Turkmenistan 4,977,386 6,928,560,446 7,940,143,236 11.6% 1,595
Grand total 277,863,109 1,278,421,583,732 1,668,683,151,661 30.53% 6,005

Collective Security Treaty Organisation

The logo of the CSTO.
     CSTO members     GUAM members     Other CIS members

The Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) (Russian: Организация Договора о Коллективной Безопасности) or simply the Tashkent Treaty (Russian: Ташкентский договор) first began as the CIS Collective Security Treaty[31] which was signed on 15 May 1992, by Armenia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russian Federation, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan, in the city of Tashkent. Azerbaijan signed the treaty on 24 September 1993, Georgia on 9 December 1993 and Belarus on 31 December 1993. The treaty came into effect on 20 April 1994.

Renewal

The CST was set to last for a 5-year period unless extended. On 2 April 1999, only six members of the CSTO signed a protocol renewing the treaty for another five year period -- Azerbaijan, Georgia and Uzbekistan refused to sign and withdrew from the treaty instead. Organization was named CSTO on 7 October 2002 in Tashkent. Nikolai Bordyuzha was appointed secretary general of the new organization. During 2005, the CSTO partners conducted some common military exercises. In 2005, Uzbekistan withdrew from GUAM and on 23 June 2006, Uzbekistan became a full participant in the CSTO and its membership was formally ratified by its parliament on 28 March 2008.[32] The CSTO is an observer organization at the United Nations General Assembly.

The charter reaffirmed the desire of all participating states to abstain from the use or threat of force. Signatories would not be able to join other military alliances or other groups of states, while aggression against one signatory would be perceived as an aggression against all. To this end, the CSTO holds yearly military command exercises for the CSTO nations to have an opportunity to improve inter-organization cooperation. The largest-scale CSTO military exercise held to date were the "Rubezh 2008" exercises hosted in Armenia where a combined total of 4,000 troops from all 7 constituent CSTO member countries conducted operative, strategic, and tactical training with an emphasis towards furthering efficiency of the collective security element of the CSTO partnership.[33]

Recent events

In May 2007 the CSTO secretary-general Nikolai Bordyuzha suggested Iran could join the CSTO saying, "The CSTO is an open organization. If Iran applies in accordance with our charter, we will consider the application."[34] If Iran joined it would be the first state outside the former Soviet Union to become a member of the organization.

On 6 October 2007, CSTO members agreed to a major expansion of the organization that would create a CSTO peacekeeping force that could deploy under a U.N. mandate or without one in its member states. The expansion would also allow all members to purchase Russian weapons at the same price as Russia.[35] CSTO signed an agreement with the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO), in the Tajik capital Dushanbe, to broaden cooperation on issues such as security, crime, and drug trafficking.[36]

On 29 August 2008, Russia announced it would seek CSTO recognition of the independence of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Three days before, on 26 August, Russia recognized the independence of Georgia's breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia.[37] On 5 September 2008, Armenia assumed the rotating CSTO presidency during a CSTO meeting in Moscow, Russia.[38]

In October 2009 Ukraine refused permission for the CIS Anti-Terrorist Center to hold anti-terrorist exercises on its territory because Ukraine's constitution bans foreign military units from operating on its territory.[39]

Other activities

Election observation missions

The CIS Election Monitoring Organization (Russian: Миссия наблюдателей от СНГ на выборах) is an election monitoring body that was formed in October 2002, following a Commonwealth of Independent States heads of states meeting which adopted the Convention on the Standards of Democratic Elections, Electoral Rights, and Freedoms in the Member States of the Commonwealth of Independent States. The CIS-EMO has been sending election observers to member countries of the CIS since this time.

Inter-Parliamentary Assembly

The Inter-Parliamentary Assembly, established in March 1995, is a consultative parliamentary wing of the CIS created to discuss problems of parliamentary cooperation.[44] The Assembly will hold its 32nd Plenary meeting in Saint Petersburg on 14 May 2009.

Russian language

Russia has been urging that the Russian language receive official status in all of the CIS member states. So far Russian is an official language in four of these states: Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan. Russian is also considered an official language in the region of Transnistria, and the autonomous region of Gagauzia in Moldova. Viktor Yanukovych, the Moscow-supported presidential candidate in the controversial Ukrainian presidential election, 2004, declared his intention to make Russian an official second language of Ukraine. However, Viktor Yushchenko, the winner, did not do so, since he was closely aligned with the Ukrainian-speaking population. Russians, who lives on Ukraine, received new hope for official status of theirs language when Viktor Yanukovych won President elections 2010.

Sports events

At the time of the Soviet Union's dissolution in December 1991, its sports teams had been invited to or qualified for various 1992 sports events. A joint CIS team took its place in some of these. The "Unified Team" competed in the 1992 Winter Olympics and 1992 Summer Olympics, and a CIS association football team competed in UEFA Euro 1992. Since then, CIS members have each competed separately in international sport.

Concept of a Single Legal Space for the CIS and Europe

Russian legal scholar Oleg Kutafin and economist Alexander Zakharov produced a Concept of a Single Legal Space for the CIS and Europe in 2002. This idea was fully incorporated in the resolution of the 2003 Moscow Legal Forum. The Forum gathered representatives of more than 20 countries including 10 CIS countries. In 2007 both the International Union of Jurists of the CIS and the International Union (Commonwealth) of Advocates passed resolutions that strongly support the Concept of a Single Legal Space for Europe and post-Soviet Countries. The concept said: "Obviously, to improve its legislation Russia and other countries of CIS should be oriented toward the continental legal family of European law. The civil law system is much closer to the Russian and other CIS countries will be instrumental in harmonizing legislation of CIS countries and the European Community but all values of common law should be also investigated on the subject of possible implementation in some laws and norms. It is suggested that the introduction of the concept of a Single legal space and a single Rule of Law space for Europe and CIS be implemented in four steps:

1.Development plans at the national level regarding adoption of selected EC legal standards in the legislation of CIS countires;

2.Promotion of measures for harmonization of law with the goal of developing a single legal space for Europe and CIS countries in the area of commercial and corporate law;

3.Making the harmonization of judicial practice of CIS countries compatible with Rule of Law principles and coordination of the basic requirements of the Rule of Law in CIS countries with the EU legal standards.

4.Development of ideas the Roerich Pact (International Treaty on the Protection of Artistic and Scientific Institution and Historic Monuments initiated by Russian thinker Nicholas Roerich and signed in 1935 by 40 percents of sovereign states in Washigton D.C.) into the law of CIS countries and European law. The only from good will of European legal community will depends where the “Legal Europe” will situated in 20-40 years: at the Pacific Ocean or on the western border of Russia.” [45]

See also

References

  1. Commonwealth of Independent States Free Trade Agreement
  2. Meetings of the leaders of the CIS member states
  3. Regional organizations in UN peacekeeping activitiesPDF (354 KB)
  4. Agreement on the Establishment of the CIS: 3 founding countries, 8 December 1991 (unofficial English translation). Russian text here
  5. Alma-Ata Declaration: 11 countries accede to the CIS, 21 December 1991 (English translation). Russian text here
  6. 6.0 6.1 Ratification status of CIS documents as of 15 January 2008 (Russian)
  7. Russia questions further existence of the CIS post-soviet organization InfoNIAC
  8. Johnson's Russia List #2142, 9 April 1998
  9. Odom, The Collapse of the Soviet Military, p.385-86
  10. Interfax, 22 December 1993, via Zbigniew Brzezinski, Paige Sullivan, 'Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States' CSIS, 1997, p.464 via Google Books
  11. SIPRI 1998 Annual, p.18
  12. 12.0 12.1 CIS Charter, 22 January 1993 (unofficial English translation). Russian text here [1]
  13. Decision on Turkmenistan's associate membership, CIS Executive Committee meeting in Kazan, Russia, 26 August 2005 (Russian).
  14. Turkmenistan reduces CIS ties to "Associate Member", Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 29 August 2005.
  15. September 2008 Statement by Foreign Minister of Ukraine Volodymyr Ohryzko, “Ukraine does not recognize the legal personality of this organization, we are not members of the CIS Economic Court, we did not ratify the CIS Statute, thus, we cannot be considered a member of this organization from international legal point of view. Ukraine is a country-participant, but not a member country”
  16. Georgia opts out of ex-Soviet military cooperation body - Pravda.Ru
  17. RIA Novosti - World - Georgia's quitting CIS council will not affect security - Russian minister
  18. Georgia intends to leave the CIS on CNN.com, 12 August 2008.
  19. Georgian parliament votes to withdraw from CIS on BBC News, 14 August 2008
  20. Statement of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Georgia on Georgia's withdrawal from CIS, 18 August 2008.
  21. Georgia's CIS membership terminates in August 2009, press conference of the Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov after the meeting of the CIS Council of Foreign Ministers, Bishkek, 9 October 2008
  22. "Georgia Withdraws from Bloc", by Ellen Barry, New York Times, 18 August 2009. Retrieved on 22 August 2009.
  23. Russia Facing Resistance With Allies On CIS's Southern Flank
  24. WTO WT/REG71/1
  25. Foundation Agreement of EAEC AGREEMENT ON FOUNDATION OF EURASIAN ECONOMIC COMMUNITY
  26. Central Asian Cooperation Organization
  27. Working group discusses Uzbekistan's accession to EurAsEC
  28. Collective Security: A Timeline
  29. 29.0 29.1 Yanukovych: Ukraine won't join Customs Union, Kyiv Post (April 27, 2010)
  30. Russia, Kazakhstan, Belarus plan on common economic space
  31. The Charter of the CSTO
  32. Евразийский дом - информационно-аналитический портал
  33. “Rubezh 2008”: The First Large-Scale CSTO Military Exercise | PfP Information Management System (PIMS)
  34. Iran invited to join Central Security Treaty Organization
  35. Gendarme of Eurasia - Kommersant Moscow
  36. Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
  37. Halpin, Tony (30 August 2008). "Kremlin announces that South Ossetia will join one united Russian state". The Times (London). http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article4635843.ece. Retrieved 30 April 2010. 
  38. Armenian News - PanARMENIAN.Net | Armenian News Agency - CSTO Security Councils Secretaries meet in Yerevan
  39. Ukraine refuses to hold CIS anti-terrorist drills on its territory, Kyiv Post (29 October 2009)
  40. Foreign observers differ in their evaluation of the election in Uzbekistan
  41. Alexander Yakovenko, the Spokesman of Russia's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Answers a Russian Media Question Regarding International Observers' Conclusions on Election Results in Ukraine and Uzbekistan
  42. CIS Observers Outraged by Deportation of Colleagues
  43. CIS: Monitoring The Election Monitors
  44. CIS Inter-Parliamentary Assembly
  45. Evgeny Semenyako, Petr Barenboim, The Moscow-Bruges Concept of a Single Legal and Rule of Law Space for Europe and Russia, Justitceinform, Moscow, 2007, ISBN 978-5-7205-0911-8; Peter Barenboim, Naeem Sidiqi, Bruges, the Bridge between Civilisations, Grid Belgium, 2010,ISBN 978-5-98856-114-9

External links