(Redirected from Central Asian Cooperation Organization)
Map of the OCAC.
'Green': Member states.
'Yellow': Observer status.
The 'Organization of Central Asian Cooperation' ('OCAC') is an international organization, composed of
Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan,
Tajikistan,
Uzbekistan and
Russia. The current member nations, minus Russia and Tajikistan, plus
Turkmenistan, formed the OCAC in 1991 as 'Central Asian Commonwealth'. Turkmenistan later withdrew from the organization. Tajikistan and Russia joined in 1998 and 2004 respectively.
Georgia,
Turkey and
Ukraine have observer status.
The OCAC's objective is to enhance "the development of the economic integration in the region, the perfection of the forms and mechanisms of expansion of the political, social, scientific-technical, cultural and educational relations."
It continued in
1994 under the name of 'Central Asian Economic Union' or CAEU and included Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan as members. In 1998 it was then renamed 'Central Asian Economic Cooperation' with the entry of Tajikistan.
In
2002 it was renamed yet again to its current name.
In the end of
2005 it was decided between the member states that Uzbekistan will join the
Eurasian Economic Community and that the organizations will merge.
Members
★ Current members:
★
★ (1991)
★
★ 1991)
★
★ (1991; self-suspended 1994-1998)
★
★ (1991)
★
★ (2004)
★ Observers:
★
★
★
★
★
★
★ Former members:
★
★ (1991; withdrawn 1994)
See also
★
Eurasian Economic Community (EURASEC)
★
Regional organisations in the Post-Soviet space
External links
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[1]