Official Website of the Republic of Belarus
News
Belarus Events Calendar
Belarus’ Top Tourist Sites
UNESCO World Heritage Sites in Belarus
Belarusian sanatoria and health resorts
Souvenirs from Belarus
| Home | News | News

News & Events in Belarus

21 Dec 2025

Lukashenko calls for stronger integration drive in EAEU

Lukashenko calls for stronger integration drive in EAEU

MINSK, 21 December (BelTA) – Belarusian President Aleksandr Lukashenko has called for the fulfillment of past agreements and a renewed focus on integration within the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) during the meeting of the Supreme Eurasian Economic Council in narrow format in Saint Petersburg on 21 December, BelTA has learned.

The head of state noted that despite all the achievements, the EAEU still has problems to solve. “No matter how much we talk about positive things here, problems do exist. We are reviewing the basic agreements of 2014 enshrined in the Treaty on the EAEU. We are postponing the deadlines for the formation of common energy markets, markets for medications and medical devices, and we state that not all countries are ready to join the unified financial market,” he stressed.

The president pointed out that new obstacles are emerging on top of the existing ones hindering the free movement of goods in mutual trade. “The unilateral closure of national markets is no longer carried out only by traditional means, as we had before, like a ban on imports and exports or licensing. Digitalization tools are being adapted for this purpose,” Aleksandr Lukashenko added.

The head of state noted that the Belarusian side had initiated addressing the issue of digital barriers, at least at the level of recommendations. “But so far we have not made much progress here either,” the Belarusian leader stated.

According to Aleksandr Lukashenko, the development and execution of joint projects and programs also leaves much to be desired, although life itself opens up new avenues. Consolidation of efforts in these promising areas could deliver much greater benefits for the economies and peoples of the member states, the Belarusian president believes.

“Just consider areas like information and communication technologies, artificial intelligence, electric transport, microelectronics, robotics, and new materials,” the Belarusian leader listed the areas. At the same time, he stated, the measures agreed upon by the member states are increasingly turning into mere reviews, reports, and recommendations.

“At our last meeting, we agreed that the chairman of the board would deliver reports on the implementation of the strategy for 2020-2025. Instead, we got information as part of the general speech by the head of the commission,” Aleksandr Lukashenko said. “We spent ten times more time just discussing the salary level of the commission [referring to the EEC members] over these five years. Yet a number of the most important issues that we agreed to resolve five years ago are still in the draft stage.”

“The work on the action plan for the 2030 and 2045 declarations was approached with caution – as if afraid of committing too deeply to integration. This logically leads to the question: do the member states still possess the same political will to pursue the objectives they proclaimed when signing the EAEU Treaty?” the Belarusian president added.

The head of state emphasized that the issues which concerned the EAEU member states in 2014 are slowly being sidelined or buried under a pile of bureaucracy. “They need to be resolved. If so, then let’s get back to work with the same enthusiasm we started with. Now is exactly the time when countries are forming alliances to act with greater focus and assertiveness. This is the attitude we have in Belarus, and that is why I call on everyone to work towards integration. This is the essence of our union,” Aleksandr Lukashenko concluded.

Archive
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
Great Patriotic War monuments in Belarus