Russian-led economic union to look at suspending Armenia over EU ambitions


MOSCOW, May 29 (Reuters) - The ⁠Russian-led Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) will consider suspending Armenia later this ⁠year out of concerns its pursuit of European Union membership ‌jeopardises the union's economic security, according to a joint statement published on Friday.

The leaders of Russia, Kazakhstan, Belarus and Kyrgyzstan said that Armenia's westward integration posed "significant risks to ​the economic security" to the EAEU, and ⁠that its continued membership would ⁠be reviewed at the group's next meeting in December.

The statement also called ⁠on ‌Yerevan to hold a popular referendum on its EU membership aspirations, and to include an option of staying in ⁠the Moscow-led group, founded in 2015.

Russia, with the EAEU's ​largest economy by ‌far, has been dialing up the pressure on Armenia in ⁠recent weeks, slapping ​temporary restrictions on agricultural imports and threatening to halt supplies of cheap Russian oil products and gas to the South Caucasus country, upon which ⁠it heavily relies.

Armenia holds a parliamentary election ​on June 7 pitting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, who has brought the country closer to the West, against an array of mostly pro-Russian opposition ⁠parties. Recent polls show Pashinyan's Civil Contract party in the lead with around 30% support.

Moscow has repeatedly said that Yerevan's membership in the EAEU is incompatible with its aspirations towards Brussels. Armenia passed a ​law last year officially launching its EU accession ⁠process.

The joint statement was adopted following a meeting earlier on Friday of ​EAEU country leaders in Astana.

Pashinyan did not ‌attend the summit, citing his ongoing ​election campaign, with Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigoryan representing Armenia.

(Reporting by Reuters; Writing by Lucy Papachristou; editing by Guy Faulconbridge)

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