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South Ossetia In Return For Hydroelectric Power Plant? Presidents Vl

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  • South Ossetia In Return For Hydroelectric Power Plant? Presidents Vl

    SOUTH OSSETIA IN RETURN FOR HYDROELECTRIC POWER PLANT? PRESIDENTS VLADIMIR PUTIN AND MIKHAIL SAAKASHVILI COULD MEET THIS MONTH
    by Yuri Simonjan, translated by A. Ignatkin

    Agency WPS
    Source: Nezavisimaya Gazeta, August 2, 2007, p. 6
    What the Papers Say Part B
    August 2, 2007 Thursday
    Russia

    Could Russia and Georgia do a deal on South Ossetia?; David Bakradze,
    Georgian State Minister for Conflict Resolution, has said that
    Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili is ready and willing to meet
    with President Vladimir Putin. Russia has three specific conditions
    that Georgia must meet before relations can improve.

    David Bakradze, Georgian State Minister for Conflict Resolution,
    has said that Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili is ready and
    willing to meet with President Vladimir Putin. "We are always ready
    for discussion and dialogue, as President Saakashvili has demonstrated
    repeatedly," Bakradze said. He added that details of the meeting are
    still being discussed.

    Sources at the Russian president's press service declined to comment.

    "We haven't announced any such meeting," said one official, referring
    all enquiries to Tbilisi. Zarina Gabiyeva, spokeswoman for the Russian
    Embassy in Georgia, confirmed that Russian Ambassador Vyacheslav
    Kovalenko views such a meeting as a distinct possibility in the
    near future.

    Given the problematic relationship between Moscow and Tbilisi,
    it will certainly take negotiations at the highest possible level
    to untangle the knot of problems and discord. Recognizing the need
    to do something about hopelessly complicated bilateral relations,
    Tbilisi nevertheless entertains the hope that the meeting of the two
    presidents will allow for some progress in resolving the problem of
    South Ossetia, one of the Georgia's two major difficulties.

    Mamuka Areshidze, director of the Caucasus Center of Strategic Studies
    and member of the RIA-Novosti Expert Council, says that Putin and
    Saakashvili are likely to focus on the same issues they discussed
    at the St. Petersburg summit on June 10: "As far as I know, they
    discussed Russian-Georgian rapprochement - if Georgia meets three
    conditions. First: withdraw objections to WTO membership for Russia.

    Second: Tbilisi's consent for Iranian gas transit to Russia. Third:
    transfer of the Inguri Hydroelectric Power Plant, partially located
    in Abkhazia, to RAO Unified Energy Systems. Once all three conditions
    are met, Tbilisi can count on Moscow's assistance in dealing with
    breakaway South Ossetia... Moscow used to insist that Tbilisi should
    abandon its policy of pursuing NATO membership - but that is no longer
    a condition."

    Areshidze notes that Saakashvili moved on from St. Petersburg to
    Paris in June, meeting with President Nicolas Sarkozy to enquire
    whether France might be interested in building a nuclear power plant
    in Georgia. Reportedly, Sarkozy said yes. "It was several days after
    Saakashvili's visit that the Georgian parliament suddenly started
    arguing that it's wrong to privatize the Inguri Hydroelectric Power
    Plant," Areshidze said, calling this "some sort of maneuvering."

    Bakradze's predecessor, Georgy Khaindrava, informed us that no such
    barter deals were being considered when he was managing negotiations
    on Georgia's behalf. According to Khaindrava, the terms of the
    alleged deal should be considered from the standpoint of Georgia's
    interests. "Russia's accession to the World Trade Organization is
    linked to our demand for Russia's assistance in establishing proper
    control on the Abkhazian and South Ossetian sectors of the Georgian
    border. The matter concerns customs checkpoints on the Psou River
    and at the entrance to the Rok Tunnel," said Khaindrava. "In fact,
    this is Georgia's only source of leverage with Russia when it comes
    to restoring order along Georgia's own borders. As for transit of
    Iranian gas... why not? That's cooperation between neighbors, nothing
    wrong with that. Being neighbors, we should help each other out -
    but the idea merits some serious thought, all the same, because the
    opinion of the international community should be taken into account
    as well. As for transferring ownership of the Inguri Hydroelectric
    Power Plant, my opinion is that it would be wrong to increase our
    energy dependence on a state that chooses the language of force in
    its dialogue with Georgia."

    Georgian lawmakers are also in favor of a meeting between the
    presidents. Kote Gabashvili, chairman of the Georgian parliament's
    foreign affairs committee, says he knows that efforts to arrange
    such a meeting are under way, but claims that this it is all he
    knows. "I certainly hope some progress will finally be made. I hope
    that representatives of Russia will join our efforts to define the
    status of South Ossetia and therefore validate their aspirations
    for the role of peacekeepers," said Gabashvili. "As for the three
    reported conditions for the process of rapprochement to begin, I'd
    say it resembles a dialogue... In my view, the first two conditions
    are open to discussion. As for the Inguri power plant, it reminds me
    of the 'Armenian scenario' - enterprises being taken over by Russian
    companies. In any case, we are prepared to discuss everything at the
    talks once the formal proposals are announced."

    The self-proclaimed and unrecognized Republic of South Ossetia remains
    blissfully unaware of the possibility of Russian-Georgian top-level
    talks. "Practically nothing is known about the meeting, but South
    Ossetias certainly hope that our case will be raised and discussed,"
    says South Ossetian government spokeswoman Irina Gagloyeva. "The
    PR campaign Georgia launched to promote its so-called provisional
    administration and portray it as a promoter of a certain political
    view and opinion is indirect evidence that the issue of South Ossetia
    will be discussed. How this discussion proceeds and how objective
    the information released by the Georgians proves to be is a different
    matter, of course."
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