In Washington, officials discussed ways to better coordinate the implementation of development cooperation programmes

Published: 18 October 2010 y., Monday

Rankų paspaudimas
On 14 October in Washington D.C., during the meeting with the heads of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) regional offices, the delegation of the Lithuanian Foreign Ministry led by Lithuanian Vice-Minister of Foreign Affairs Evaldas Ignatavičius discussed ways to better coordinate the development cooperation and democracy promotion programmes that are being implemented by the two countries.

Vice-Minister E.Ignatavičius said that Lithuania’s development cooperation and democracy promotion policy aims to improve the political, economic and social situation in the European Union’s Eastern neighborhood countries and in Afghanistan.
“Such choice of priority countries is determined by the directions of Lithuania’s foreign policy. The Lithuanian chairmanship of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) and presidency of the Community of Democracies open up new possibilities for Lithuania’s foreign policy,” Vice-Minister E.Ignatavičius said.

The Vice-Minister said that first of all Lithuania supported projects aimed at social development, health care and administrative capacity building.

During the meeting, officials also discussed issues related to Afghanistan. Vice-Minister E.Ignatavičius urged the U.S.A. to dedicate more attention to the development of the province of Ghor in Afghanistan. The officials agreed to further consult on the means of cooperation.

When speaking about the EU’s Eastern neighborhood countries, Lithuania called the USAID’s attention to this region and invited to contribute to Lithuania’s ongoing projects.

According to Vice-Minister E.Ignatavičius, the EU’s Eastern Partnership initiative also opened up additional possibilities. The U.S.A. could as well find its own niche within the framework of this initiative.

The Lithuanian delegation met with the USAID Senior Advisor for Afghanistan and Pakistan Alan E. Van Egmond, head of the USAID’s office in Eurasia Kent A. Larson, and other officials.
 
 

Šaltinis: urm.lt
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

The Turkish - Russian Business Council Meeting

Erdogan Participates In The Turkish - Russian Business Council Meeting more »

Searching a Joint Decision

LITHUANIAN AND ESTONIAN PRESIDENTS STILL UNSURE OF GOING TO MOSCOW ON MAY 9 more »

Russia and Kazakhstan discuss cooperation

Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Kazakhstani counterpart Nursultan Nazarbayev discussed the final details of the process of delimitation of the border between Kazakhstan and Russia more »

Macedonian-Albanian relations

MACEDONIA AND ALBANIA TO FOCUS ON ECONOMIC COOPERATION IN 2005 more »

UZBEKISTAN-EU COOPERATION COMMITTEE MEETS IN BRUSSELS

Fifth session of Uzbekistan-European Union Cooperation Committee, main executive body in implementation of provisions of the Agreement on Partnership and Cooperation between the sides, was held in Brussels, Belgium more »

Vīķe-Freiberga plans visit to Netherlands

Latvian President Vaira Vīķe-Freiberga has scheduled a two-day state visit to the Netherlands more »

Ukraine Court Halts Publication Of Vote Results

Ukraine's Supreme Court halted publication of the final results of last month's repeat presidential election until it examines an appeal from the defeated candidate more »

Belarus president waves iron fist

Belarus President Aleksander Lukashenko has insisted there will be no people's revolutions, whether "rose, orange or banana", in his country more »

Yushchenko declared official winner of Ukraine presidential vote

Ukrainian election officials declared Viktor Yushchenko the official winner of a presidential rerun vote more »

Armenia, Azerbaijan To Resume Karabakh Talks

Armenia and Azerbaijan will resume early next week internationally mediated negotiations that could mark a turning point in their protracted search for a mutually acceptable solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict more »