the Kingdom of Norway
RUSSIAN FOREIGN MINISTRY OFFICIAL SPOKESMAN ALEXANDER YAKOVENKO COMMENTS ON RUSSO-NORWEGIAN RELATIONS IN VIEW OF RUSSIAN PRESIDENT VLADIMIR PUTIN'S VISIT TO OSLO ON NOVEMBER 12TH
--Will you please comment on the state and prospects of Russo-Norwegian relations?
--Intensive political dialogue is currently developing between Norway and Russia at a high-profile level. The Russian president visited Norway in March 1996, and the Norwegian king returned the visit in May 1998.
The meetings between prime-ministers and foreign ministers have acquired an annual character. Contacts between the Russian and Norwegian parliaments are expanding. President of the Norwegian Storting (parliament) visited Russia on September 16th-20th. This year has been declared by the Norwegian diplomacy "the year of Russia." Bilateral regional co-operation in northwestern Russia within the Council of the Barents/Euro-Arctic Region (SBER) is effectively developing. Our participation in SBER is oriented at an all-round solution to social and economic and environmental problems facing the Russian part of the region, and further development of integration processes in relations with North European partners.
--How essential is the economic component of Russo-Norwegian relations?
--Economic interaction has been intensifying in the past years. Trade volumes are swelling exceeding 1 bln dollars last year, the Norwegian investment in the Russian economy went up to 0.9 bln dollars. Joint efforts are concentrated on developing oil and gas deposits, modernisation of Russian shipyards, fish processing and port economy, telecommunications and pharmaceutical production.
Great importance is attached to the dialogue between Russia and Norway, as major European oil and gas producers and exporters, on energy issues, including the price policy.
We hail Russia-Norway joint management of common fish reserves of the Barents Sea. Both countries are responsible for their preservation.
--How is Russia-Norway partnership developing in the international arena?
--Our countries stand together on a number of key international issues. Being a non-permanent member of the UN Security Council, Norway is actively participating in the fight against international terrorism, efforts to settle conflicts, and is energetically assisting the disarmament process.
There are promising opportunities to expand co-operation with Norway within the new format of Russia-NATO relations and European integration.
Russo-Norwegian and multilateral interaction is increasing in the area of nuclear and radiation safety. Negotiations are under way on drafting an agreement on the Multilateral Nuclear and Ecological Programme in the Russian Federation (MNEPR) and on the intergovernmental Russo-Norwegian-American agreement on military-ecological co-operation in the Arctic Region (AMEK). Mutually acceptable solutions are already in sight.
We are closely co-operating with the Norwegians in Middle Eastern affairs and the post-conflict development of Afghanistan.