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MINSK, Belarus (AP) — The powerful Soviet Union may still exist after all — at least on paper.
Former Belarusian leader Stanislav Shushkevich says a historic 1991 document that proclaimed the death of the Soviet Union is missing from the archives.
Shushkevich
discovered that the document was gone while working on his memoirs. He
said he believes it was stolen — possibly by a former Belarusian
official — probably with the intention of selling it to a collector.
"It's hard to believe the
disappearance of a document at such a level, but this is a fact,"
Shushkevich told The Associated Press.
Officials with Belarus'
government and the Russia-dominated alliance of ex-Soviet nations
confirmed late Wednesday that they only have copies.
"We don't know where the original is," said Vasily Ostreiko,
the head of the archive department of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, which has its headquarters in Minsk, the Belarusian capital. "We
have a copy of that document. It's certified in line with international
standards, but it's still a copy."
The document's disappearance
reflects the chaos that surrounded the 1991 demise of the Soviet Union, a
superpower of 300 million people that sprawled over nearly a dozen time
zones and encompassed what is now 15 nations.
On Dec. 8, 1991, Shushkevich
hosted Russian President Boris Yeltsin and Ukrainian President Leonid
Kravchuk for secret talks at a government hunting lodge near Viskuli in
the Belovezha Forest. The trio signed a deal declaring that "the
U.S.S.R. has ceased to exist as a subject of international law and
geopolitical reality" — defeating Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev's
attempts to hold the Soviet Union together.
The agreement also announced the
creation of the Commonwealth of Independent States, a loose alliance
joined by nine other Soviet republics that month.
Gorbachev resigned on Dec. 25,
1991, and the Soviet Communist empire that ruled with an iron fist for
almost 70 years seized to exist.
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