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  • Georgia For Georgians?

    GEORGIA FOR THE GEORGIANS?
    by Oleg Gorupai, translated by A. Ignatkin

    Agency WPS
    Source: Krasnaya Zvezda, July 28, 2007, p. 3
    DEFENSE and SECURITY
    August 1, 2007 Wednesday
    Russia

    MIKHAIL SAAKASHVILI'S POLICY AGGRAVATES ETHNIC PROBLEMS IN GEORGIA;
    President Saakashvili's policy mounts ethnic tension in Georgia and
    foments immigration.

    Tbilisi invited Tskhinvali to attend a meeting of the state commission
    for determination of South Ossetian status within Georgia.

    State Minister for Conflict Settlement, David Bakradze, said he had
    already cabled the invitation to Tskhinvali. The state commission
    was established on President Mikhail Saakashvili's order. Chaired by
    Prime Minister Zurab Nogaideli, it includes Interior Minister Gela
    Bezhuashvili and some other heads of ministries and departments.

    South Ossetia declined the invitation as "groundless", to quote
    Foreign Minister Murat Jioyev. "Trying to persuade the West that they
    too contribute to the process of conflict settlement, the Georgian
    authorities are simply aggravating Georgian-Ossetian relations,"
    Jioyev said.

    Regardless of what Tbilisi might be claiming, Moscow never received
    any cables from it concerning work on the status of South Ossetia,
    according to Ambassador-at-Large, Yuri Popov, who represents the
    Russian Federation in the Joint Control Commission. Commenting on
    Nogaideli's promise to invite the EU and government of Russia to
    participate, Popov said, "Actually, I'm not sure at all that Russia
    will want participation because it implies the necessity to negotiate
    with Dmitry Sanakoyev, the head of the provisional administration...

    Moscow does not regard Sanakoyev as a participant in the talks."

    Russia is convinced that no negotiations over the Georgian-Ossetian
    conflict settlement or status of South Ossetia are possible without
    the actual involvement of the South Ossetian side.

    The matter was discussed by President of South Ossetia, Eduard Kokoity,
    and OSCE Chairman's Envoy, Jose Barella, who told the South Ossetian
    leader he knew how dangerous Sanakoyev's administration was because
    its activities could foment another conflict. All the same, Tbilisi
    keeps insisting on having Sanakoyev in the talks. The government of
    Georgia sponsors his administration and strengthens its security's
    might. Saakashvili needs South Ossetia back under Tbilisi's control or
    everything will have been in vain. Unless the conflicts are settled,
    Tbilisi can forget about EU and NATO membership. The premise was
    aired by an obscure Lithuanian official, but the implications are
    clear. "Established borders are of paramount importance for NATO
    and the EU. Even if all membership rules are observed but conflicts
    on the borders remain unsettled, Georgia's entry will be extremely
    problematic and everyone knows it," one Kestutis Kriciunas, adviser
    to the defense minister of Lithuania, said.

    The haste with which Saakashvili is trying to settle ethnic conflicts
    in Georgia does not improve the image of Georgia in the eyes of the
    international community. Ossetians and Abkhazians are not the only
    ones to be encountering problems in its relations with the Georgian
    leadership. The Azerbaijani diaspora in the Marneul and Bolnis
    districts of the republic regularly complain of harassment. Similar
    reports come from Samtskhe-Javakhetia where the Armenians live. The
    Greeks are leaving Georgia en masse, clearly scared of last year's
    incidents in Tsalka. The Russian-speakers' exodus from Georgia is
    nearly over. The "Advance guard" of the Dukhobor community from
    the Ninotsmind district of Georgia settled in the Tambov region
    of Russia over a month ago. Gorelovka, Bogdanovka, Zhdanovka,
    Spasskoye and other settlements are abandoned. Over 3,000 families
    moved to Bryansk, Voronezh, and other Russian regions. The Dukhobors
    discovered their rights encroached on in Georgia. The authorities
    refused to sell them land, claiming that their settlements were
    located in the five-kilometers wide border zone. The Dukhobors were
    left without anything because agriculture and cattle-breeding are
    their life. Over 273,500 Russians left Georgia since 1999, depleting
    the Russian diaspora in this country by more than 80%.
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