Russia 110712 Basic Political Developments


Minister hopeful about economic ties with Russia



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Minister hopeful about economic ties with Russia


http://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/business/Minister_hopeful_about_economic_ties_with_Russia.html?cid=30660952

Swiss Economics Minister Johann Schneider-Ammann says there is great potential for Switzerland and Russia to further their economic ties.


Schneider-Ammann was speaking on Monday to Russian captains of industry in Moscow, as part of a four-day visit to the country.
The economics minister told the audience that interest from Swiss companies wishing to expand to Russia was growing.
 
“I'm sure that Switzerland with its modern economic structure, its potential in know-how and innovative high-technology products can be an interesting partner for Russia in the process of realizing its ambitious modernising efforts,” Schneider-Ammann said.
 
However, Frank Schauff, the director of the Association of European Businesses in the Russian Federation, told Schneider-Ammann and other members of the Swiss delegation that Russia had not yet recovered from the economic crisis.
 
Analysts expect the Russian economy to grow by around 3.5 per cent over the next few years, with inflation around eight per cent. In 2008, the economy grew by eight per cent.
 
On Wednesday, Schneider-Ammann will take part in a meeting between this year’s Swiss president, Micheline Calmy-Rey and Russian President Dmitri Medvedev.
swissinfo.ch and agencies


Mideast Quartet urges direct peace talks between Israel, PA


http://en.rian.ru/world/20110712/165146577.html
07:46 12/07/2011

The Middle East Quartet of negotiators again urged the Israelis and Palestinians to resume direct talks without any preconditions, a high-ranking U.S. official said.

Monday's Middle East Quartet meeting focused on ways to resume direct negotiations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority, the official said. The talks came to a halt in September 2010 after Israel refused to extend its 10-month moratorium on settlement construction in the Palestinian territories.

"The quartet principals have conducted a good meeting over the dinner tonight, characterized the discussion as excellent and substantive," the U.S. official said.

"The principals are reiterating... that there is urgent need to appeal to the parties to overcome current obstacles and find ways to resume the direct negotiations without preconditions," he added.

The statement is contrary to a forecast made by chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat, who said ahead of the meeting the mediators will not call for the resumption of talks between PA and Israel.

The source also said that though serious differences remain between Israelis and Palestinians, they do not make a peace solution impossible. He said the Quartet was ready for any mediation effort in search for a compromise, but both sides of the conflict must make hard decisions and concessions to forge peace.

The Palestinians want to form an independent state within the 1967 borders before Israel occupied the West Bank, Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem, while Israel wants Jerusalem to be its "eternal and undivided" capital.

The participants of Monday's meeting of the Quartet, comprising the United Nations, the European Union, the U.S. and Russia, decided not to issue statements on the results of their work.

"The quartet doesn't meet in order to issue statements," the official said. "The quartet meets in order to allow these principals to consult on some very complex and challenging issues, discuss how best to work and push them forward."

"And this evening the decision was that we needed to realistically acknowledge the fact that more work needs to be done with the parties on their gaps and in order to allow us to get to the part when we might be able to have a productive public product by the quartet," he added.

Quartet Meetings at various levels will continue until the end of the week, the source said.

WASHINGTON, July 12 (RIA Novosti)

JULY 12, 2011


U.S., Kremlin Reach Deal to Monitor Adoptions


http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304584404576440153010490110.html

By RICHARD BOUDREAUX


MOSCOW—The U.S. and Russia have reached an accord that will subject Americans who adopt Russian children to closer monitoring for signs of abuse or neglect in their homes, potentially removing an irritant in the two countries' relations.

The agreement is set to be signed on Wednesday after 15 months of negotiation and sent to Russia's parliament for ratification. Both sides say it will help dispel distrust that has slowed American adoptions in Russia but also could make those adoptions somewhat costlier.

More than 50,000 Russian children have been adopted over the past two decades by families in the U.S., more than in any other country, without a bilateral accord regulating the process.

Russia had demanded one for years, but Washington agreed to the talks only after Moscow threatened to halt adoptions in response to the plight of a 7-year-old boy who was sent back to Russia alone last year by his adoptive mother in Tennessee, claiming that he had psychological problems with which she couldn't cope.

Under the accord, a copy of which was reviewed by The Wall Street Journal, the U.S. State Department will work closely with Russia's Ministry of Education to gather periodic reports on the living conditions and "psychological and physical development" of adopted Russian children and to address any serious problems.

"We will have clear information, and this will make it easier for us to monitor the welfare of our children," Pavel Astakhov, Russia's children's rights ombudsman, said in an interview.

Families are now required by Moscow to undergo four home visits by an American social worker within three years after adopting a Russian child, enabling the adoption agency to report to Moscow on the child's status. Under the agreement, the agency is further held responsible for tracking the child until age 18 and continuing to report any instances of abuse, neglect, termination of the adoption, or adoption by another family.

The accord also would bar adoptions facilitated by independent operators to help parents short-circuit the process. Russia would limit participation in the program to those U.S. adoption agencies that comply with a 1993 Hague Convention on intercountry adoptions.

Hague requirements include rigorous training of parents wanting to adopt foreign children. Most of the roughly 30 U.S. agencies licensed in Russia already meet those standards, adoption advocates say.

U.S. officials welcomed the agreement but declined to discuss details ahead of its expected signing in Washington by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and her Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov.

Russian officials and American adoption advocates say the Cabinet-level oversight, strict licensing and prolonged reporting requirements would help detect troubled U.S. adoptions that have recently caused scandals in Russia.

In one such case, a Georgia woman, Marta Blanford, adopted a Russian girl in 2001 but gave up her parental rights in 2009. The child was then adopted by the woman's sister and her husband, Michael Grismore. He was indicted last July on five counts involving the beating and sexual abuse of the child, and is awaiting trial in Cherokee County, Georgia.

Had Russian officials been informed of the second adoption, Mr. Astakhov said, they could have objected, or at least requested home-study reports on her new family. The U.S.-Russia accord requires such notification "in a reasonable time" and Russia's consent for any readoption.

The reporting requirements spelled out in the accord could lead to more detailed contracts between American agencies and adoptive families, involving marginally higher fees, adoption specialists say.

"What the Russians are saying is, 'We can ask you anytime about the child and you need to know where that child might be,' " said Larisa Mason, a board member of the Virginia-based National Council for Adoption, an adoption advocacy group. "There will be more responsibility on the agencies to be involved with the parents."

She and other advocates said the agreement should reassure Russian governors and judges, who have been reluctant to approve adoptions in some regions since the Tennessee case last year, as well as American families who then hesitated to seek children in Russia. American adoptions in Russia declined last year to 1,079, from 1,586 in 2009.

"Instead of two countries addressing child protection issues independently, this agreement brings them together to ensure that children's best interests are served," said Tom DiFilipo, president of the Virginia-based Joint Council on International Children's Services, another advocacy group. "As a result, we believe there will be fewer incidents of abuse or neglect."

Shalini Ramachandran


in Atlanta
contributed to this article.

Write to Richard Boudreaux at richard.boudreaux@wsj.com




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