"I am entitled to review all Eurasec's decisions...We must honestly give up inapplicable documents," said Lukashenko, currently in the Russian northwestern city of St. Petersburg for a session of the Eurasec Interstate Council.
Eurasec, an economic club of former Soviet countries, comprising Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgystan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan, should focus on forming a common currency and customs and transportation regulations, according to Lukashenko, who also heads the Interstate Council.
Lukashenko said that solving the "transit problem" would contribute to the formation of a "transportation union", which would allow for the doubling of trade within Eurasec in a year after it comes into effect.
Lukashenko said he would present draft documents, based on the proposals of Eurasec member-states' leaders, at the next Interstate Council's summit in the Belarusian capital of Minsk.