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Saakashvili gives Aliyev the Tbilisi Meridian

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  • Saakashvili gives Aliyev the Tbilisi Meridian

    Agency WPS
    What the Papers Say Part A (Russia)
    February 9, 2007 Friday

    SAAKASHVILI GIVES ALIYEV THE TBILISI MERIDIAN;
    Georgia, Azerbaijan, and Turkey are launching a large-scale project

    by Anatoly Gordiyenko

    Georgia, Azerbaijan, and Turkey expand trilateral cooperation;
    President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan and Turkish Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan have visited Georgia for a trilateral regional
    cooperation summit. They signed an agreement on another large-scale
    project involving all three countries: a Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railroad.


    Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili has received President Ilham
    Aliyev of Azerbaijan and Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
    who have come to Georgia for a trilateral regional cooperation
    summit. The meeting's chief result was the signing of an agreement on
    another large-scale project involving all three countries: a
    Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railroad.

    The project's estimated cost is $422 million, or $600 million
    including associated infrastructure. Construction is scheduled to
    start this summer and be completed in 2009. The new railroad, with a
    throughput capacity of 5-8 million tons of cargo per year, is
    intended to connect Azerbaijan and Turkey, as well as becoming an
    important link in an East-West transport corridor.

    The project is going ahead despite clear disapproval from the United
    States (Washington believes it will exacerbate Armenia's isolation)
    and skepticism among many Georgian specialists and politicians, who
    say that this railroad will primarily benefit Azerbaijan and Turkey.

    Salome Zurabishvili, Georgia's former foreign affairs minister,
    maintains that this shorter rail route will take away the chief
    function of Georgia's ports, used to transport most cargo to Europe
    by sea. Moreover, the project's opponents have argued that Georgia's
    budget can't afford $200 million to upgrade the Soviet-era
    Tbilisi-Akhalkalaki railroad branch and extend it to the Turkish
    border.

    Baku has come up with some counter-arguments. Azerbaijan has offered
    Georgia a low-interest (1% per annum) long-term loan of $200 million.
    It has also helped resolve Georgia's energy problems by starting
    deliveries of natural gas to Georgia. Eventually, the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railroad agreement was formalized yesterday without
    any objections from the Georgians. The final questions were resolved
    during Saakashvili's bilateral talks with Aliyev and Erdogan, and at
    their trilateral meeting.

    President Aliyev arrived, as scheduled, several hours before Prime
    Minister Erdogan, and received some special marks of attention. His
    visit to Tbilisi opened with a surprise prepared by President
    Saakashvili. Aliyev was driven from the airport straight to the
    Laguna Vere sports center on the bank of the Kura River, where the
    two presidents unveiled a memorial to Heidar Aliyev, father of
    Azerbaijan's present leader. This memorial is a granite pillar four
    meters tall, symbolizing the strengthening strategic partnership
    between Georgia, Azerbaijan, and Turkey; it is called the Tbilisi
    Meridian and is inscribed with figures indicating the distance from
    Tbilisi to Baku and Ankara.

    Source: Nezavisimaya Gazeta, February 8, 2007, p. 6

    Translated by Elena Leonova
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