Medvedev visits Serbia bearing $1 billion loan

By DUSAN STOJANOVIC (AP) – 17 hours ago

BELGRADE, Serbia — Russian President Dmitry Medvedev brought a $1 billion
loan to recession-hit Serbia on Tuesday, as Moscow sought to expand its
political and economic influence in the Balkans with the first-ever visit to
Serbia by a Russian president.

The loan deal — to be signed during Medvedev's one-day trip — adds to
Russia's growing clout in Serbia, which relies on Moscow's diplomatic
support in the U.N. Security Council to oppose the secession of Kosovo,
Serbia's former province.

Thousands of policemen were deployed on the streets of Belgrade and much of
the Serbian capital was blocked to traffic amid tightened security.

"Medvedev's visit will confirm the political unity and mutual support
between Serbia and Russia," said Serbia's Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremic.

Last year, Russia's state-controlled gas monopoly OAO Gazprom bought
Serbia's major oil and gas assets and agreed to route through Serbia its
proposed South Stream pipeline, which aims to bring Russian gas from the
Black Sea to Europe.

The South Stream route across the Balkans would avoid Ukraine, with which
Russia has pricing and political disputes. It competes with a U.S. and
European Union-backed proposed pipeline called Nabucco that would send
Europe natural gas from Caspian Sea nations, not Russia, to diversity
Europe's natural gas suppliers.

Gazprom has also purchased a 51-percent stake in Serbia's oil company NIS, a
deal that gives Russia a monopoly over the sale of gasoline and natural gas
in Serbia until 2011.

Serbia and Russia are traditional allies, sharing a common Slavic background
and Christian Orthodox religion. But their political relations have not
matched the ethnic ties and Belgrade has been seeking to integrate with the
West, including joining the EU.

Although reluctantly supporting Serbia's EU bid, Moscow officials have
firmly spoken against its possible NATO membership.

The United States would like to see Serbia in the Western military alliance
because that would add to security in the Balkans, which is still reeling
from bloody ethnic conflicts in the 1990s.

Medvedev will also attend celebrations marking the liberation of Belgrade
from Nazi occupation in World War II by Soviet and local communist fighters.
He will address Parliament and visit the seat of the Serbian Orthodox
Church.

On the eve of the visit, Russian diplomats demanded that Belgrade
authorities restore the names of streets formerly named after the Red Army
generals who took part in the 1945 liberation of the city.

The names were changed after the fall of President Slobodan Milosevic in
2000. Milosevic had maintained close ties with Moscow.

Associate Press writer Jovana Gec contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. 

 

 

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