Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Belarus 19 May 2021
On May 19, 2021 in Dushanbe (Republic of Tajikistan), the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Belarus, Vladimir Makei, took part in the meeting of the Council of Foreign Ministers of the Мember States of the Collective Security Treaty Organization.
At the meeting, the sides exchanged views on the state and prospects for the international and regional situation and its’ impact on the security of the CSTO member states. The Ministers stressed the importance of interaction at international platforms, noted the need to further enhancement of cooperation between the CSTO and other international organizations, as well as to step up efforts to enhance the role of the CSTO in maintaining international peace and security.
CSTO foreign ministers advocate strengthening Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention
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CSTO adopts statement on 75th anniversary of verdict of Nuremberg Trials
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CSTO foreign ministers to discuss international situation, make political statements in Dushanbe
MINSK, 17 May (BelTA) – An offline session of the Foreign Ministers Council of the Collective Security Treaty Organization will take place in Dushanbe, Tajikistan on 19 May. Secretary General of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) Stanislav Zas will take part in it, BelTA learned from CSTO Press Secretary Vladimir Zainetdinov.
The ministers of foreign affairs of the CSTO member states will discuss the state and prospects of development of the international situation and the regional situation and their influence on the security of the CSTO member states.
The CSTO Foreign Ministers Council is expected to make important political statements concerning the Collective Security Treaty Organization s cooperation with international organizations, the extension of the period of validity of the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (SNV-3), and the 75th anniversary of the verdict of
Why India needs to set up a truth commission to help it really heal from the Covid-19 pandemic
The mismanagement by the authorities during the second wave of infections is nothing less than a crime against humanity. May 13, 2021 · 06:30 am A woman at the cremation of her husband, who died from the coronavirus disease in New Delhi on May 5. | Adnan Abidi / Reuters
Justice is retrospective – it can only punish what has happened, restore what is already lost and reconcile what was once broken.
In that way, justice – taken to be broader than just retributive – is a means for fairness, closure and wherever possible, moving on. This, in part, was understood at the end of the Second World War. The International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg was constituted, almost with desperation, to hold some party accountable for the destruction and human suffering.