Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05BRUSSELS2231
2005-06-09 15:02:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Brussels
Cable title:  

EU CONSIDERING HARDER LINE ON UZBEKISTAN

Tags:  PREL PGOV PHUM UZ EUN USEU BRUSSELS 
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C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 BRUSSELS 002231 

SIPDIS

DEPT FOR EUR/ERA - LERSTEN; EUR/CACEN - LOGSDON; EUR/RPM

E.O. 12958: DECL: 06/09/2015
TAGS: PREL PGOV PHUM UZ EUN USEU BRUSSELS
SUBJECT: EU CONSIDERING HARDER LINE ON UZBEKISTAN

REF: A. A) TASHKENT 1623


B. B) STATE 106098

C. C) BRUSSELS 2008

Classified By: USEU POLOFF TODD HUIZINGA, FOR REASONS 1.4 (B) AND (D)

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 BRUSSELS 002231

SIPDIS

DEPT FOR EUR/ERA - LERSTEN; EUR/CACEN - LOGSDON; EUR/RPM

E.O. 12958: DECL: 06/09/2015
TAGS: PREL PGOV PHUM UZ EUN USEU BRUSSELS
SUBJECT: EU CONSIDERING HARDER LINE ON UZBEKISTAN

REF: A. A) TASHKENT 1623


B. B) STATE 106098

C. C) BRUSSELS 2008

Classified By: USEU POLOFF TODD HUIZINGA, FOR REASONS 1.4 (B) AND (D)


1. (C) SUMMARY: EU Foreign Ministers will consider taking
punitive measures against Uzbekistan unless the GOU agrees by
the end of June to an independent, international inquiry into
the Andijon events. If the GOU does not agree to an
international inquiry, Germany plans to push for use of the
OSCE "Moscow Mechanism," by which 10 or more OSCE member
states can call for an OSCE rapporteur on Andijon without
Uzbekistan's agreement. The possibility of an EU visa ban,
after the end-of-June deadline, on high-level GOU officials
has also been raised. Although the outcome of internal
deliberations is uncertain, those calling for a harder line
appear to be gaining ground within the EU. Meanwhile, France
has not yet officially refused the GOU's invitation to
monitor a GOU-led investigation (REFS A-B). The EU is still
trying to get its Special Rep for Human Rights a visa to
visit Uzbekistan, despite the GOU's recent refusal to grant
one. END SUMMARY.

--------------
EU DEBATING TOUGH POLICY DECLARATION
--------------


2. (C) On June 8 Poloff met with Leo Schulte-Nordholt, EU
Council Principal Officer for OSCE Affairs, and Ausra
Aleliunaite, EU Council Principal Officer for Central Asia.
They said EU Foreign Ministers would discuss, at the June 13
GAERC meeting, a draft declaration on Uzbekistan. The
declaration will repeat EU FMs' May 23 call for the GOU to
agree to an independent, international inquiry into the
Andijon events (REF C). Two questions are being debated
internally: (1) whether to set a deadline (probably the end
of June) for the GOU to agree to an international
investigation; and (2) whether to outline specific punitive
measures the EU would take if the Uzbeks do not agree by the
deadline. Schulte-Nordholt said the main action under
consideration was to downgrade the EU-Uzbekistan Partnership
and Cooperation Agreement (PCA),and cut off development
assistance other than aid that goes directly to independent
civil society groups.

--------------
FRENCH UNLIKELY TO ACCEPT UZBEK INVITATION
--------------


3. (C) Our interlocutors reported that France had raised the
question within the EU of whether it should accept the Uzbek
invitation to monitor a GOU investigation of the Andijon
events. They told us that, although France had fended off
all Uzbek approaches on this question so far, it had not yet
come to a final decision. In the light of the EU call for an
independent international inquiry, though, they predicted the
EU would counsel France against accepting the Uzbek
invitation. Language declining the invitation to the French
might be included in the June 13 FMs' declaration, they said.

--------------
EU HUMAN RIGHTS REP TO VISIT UZBEKISTAN?
--------------


4. (C) Schulte-Nordholt told us that EU HighRep Javier Solana
was trying to persuade the Uzbeks to grant his Special Rep
for Human Rights a visa to visit Uzbekistan. The Special
Rep, Michael Matthiessen, had been denied a visa last week.
Schulte-Nordholt added that Matthiessen was trying to get the
EU FMs' declaration to include language calling on the GOU to
grant the visa. Schulte-Nordholt predicted, though, that EU
FM's would balk at making demands at that level of
specificity.

--------------
IF UZBEKS REFUSE, MOSCOW MECHANISM?
--------------


5. (C) Schulte-Nordholt said that Germany was likely to
invoke the OSCE Moscow Mechanism (by which ten or more OSCE
member states would appoint a rapporteur on Uzbekistan
without GOU concurrence) if the Uzbeks refused to allow an
international investigation by the notional EU-imposed
deadline of end of June. He said the Germans were attempting
to get agreement on this from all of the 24 other EU member
states, but might well press on even if EU consensus proved
unachievable. Schulte-Nordholt added that the Germans could
easily get the agreement of at least 9 other EU member
states, thus reaching the number required by OSCE rules.

--------------
AN EU VISA BAN ON GOU OFFICIALS?
--------------

6. (C) Schulte-Nordholt told us the possibility of an EU visa
ban on high-level GOU officials had also been raised. If the
EU did set an end-of-June deadline and the Uzbeks did not
meet the deadline, he said, deliberations on such a ban would
begin in earnest.


7. (C) COMMENT: Our interlocutors stressed that the questions
of whether to impose a deadline and name specific punitive
measures were still undecided. Nonetheless, those within the
EU calling for a harder line to force the GOU's hand seem to
be gaining momentum. END COMMENT.

SCHNABEL
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