BBC Homepage World Service Education
BBC Homepagelow graphics version | feedback | help
BBC News Online
 You are in: World: Americas
Front Page 
World 
Africa 
Americas 
Asia-Pacific 
Europe 
Middle East 
South Asia 
-------------
From Our Own Correspondent 
-------------
Letter From America 
UK 
UK Politics 
Business 
Sci/Tech 
Health 
Education 
Entertainment 
Talking Point 
In Depth 
AudioVideo 

Tuesday, 5 December, 2000, 12:40 GMT
American security expert in Kazakhstan

A leading American State Department advisor -- who's in Kazakhstan -- has discussed joint co-operation in fighting terrorism and extremism in the Central Asian region.

The advisor, Stephen Sestanovich, held talks in Almaty with the Kazakh Security Council secretary, Marat Tazhin.

At a news conference later, Mr Sestanovich rejected suggestions that the United States was seeking to use air bases in central Asia to launch strikes against bases of the Islamic fundamentalist Osama bin Laden, whom the United States blames for the bombings of two American embassies in east Africa in 1998.

Mr Sestanovich said that the level of co-operation between the Unitged States and central Asian countries in the fight against terrorism gave no grounds for such reports. The central Asian republics, for their part, blame the Taleban administration in Kabul for the spread of drugs and weapons in the region.

Mr Sestanovich was also due to discuss military and economic co-operation with Kazakh officials.

From the newsroom of the BBC World Service

Search BBC News Online

Advanced search options
Launch console
BBC RADIO NEWS
BBC ONE TV NEWS
WORLD NEWS SUMMARY
PROGRAMMES GUIDE
Links to more Americas stories are at the foot of the page.


E-mail this story to a friend

Links to more Americas stories