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An oil refinery in Plock, Poland, is seen in this
undated handout photo. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery
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MOSCOW, Jan. 11 (Xinhua) -- Russian oil exports to
Europe via Belarus have started flowing again after a three-day hiatus amid a
trade dispute between Minsk and Moscow, the Itar-Tass news agency reported early
Thursday citing a Belarussian official.
Belarus resumed transit of Russian oil through the
Druzhba pipeline at 10:35 p.m. local time (2035 GMT) Wednesday, the head of the
pipeline operator Gomeltransneft Druzhba, Alexei Kostyuchenko, was quoted as
saying.
Russia provides about a quarter of the oil and gas
consumed in the European Union (EU), some of which is piped through Belarus. The
oil disruption, which began Monday morning, has affected Poland, Germany,
Hungary, the Czech Republic and Slovakia.
The resumption of Russian oil flows came hours after
Belarus decided to cancel a customs duty it imposed on Russian oil exports,
which was imposed after Russia slapped export duties on crude oil supplied to
Belarus at the beginning of the year.
The move to annul the transit duty followed an
announcement by Belarus that a compromise to the row was found during a
telephone conversation between Belarussian President Alexander Lukashenko and
his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin on Wednesday.
Lukashenko and Putin "came to a compromise, which
would help settle all the problems including those connected with Russian oil
transit to European states via Belarus," after talking on the telephone, state
news agency BelTA reported, citing the presidential press service.
The Kremlin issued a terse statement on the two
leaders' telephone talks but did not mention a compromise.
The two presidents discussed "economic cooperation
between Russia and Belarus, including in the energy sphere, such as problems
related to the transit of Russian crude oil via Belarus," the statement said.
Related stories:
Russia, Belarus move closer to deal in
oil row
MOSCOW, Jan. 10 (Xinhua) -- Belarus on Wednesday
canceled a customs duty it imposed on Russian oil exports amid a dispute over
oil transit between Moscow and Minsk, raising hopes the deadlock that has led to
the disruption of oil flows to Europe could be resolved soon.
Moscow has tied the withdrawal of the transit duty,
which was imposed after Russia slapped export duties on crude oil supplied to
Belarus at the beginning of the year, to the start of any talks.
Belarus reaches compromise with Russia on oil
dispute
MOSCOW, Jan. 10 (Xinhua) -- Belarus and Russia have
reached a compromise on a dispute that disrupted the flow of Russian oil to some
European countries, the Belarussian president said on Wednesday.
Belarussian President Alexander Lukashenko and his Russian
counterpart Vladimir Putin "came to a compromise, which would help settle all
the problems including those connected with Russian oil transit to European
states via Belarus", after talking on the telephone, news agency BelTA reported,
citing the presidential press service.
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