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TBILISI: Saakashvili: Samtskhe-Javakheti "Completely Integrated Into

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  • TBILISI: Saakashvili: Samtskhe-Javakheti "Completely Integrated Into

    SAAKASHVILI: SAMTSKHE-JAVAKHETI "COMPLETELY INTEGRATED INTO GEORGIA"
    By Anna Kamushadze

    The Messenger, Georgia
    June 26 2007

    President Mikheil Saakashvili took a tour through Samtskhe-Javakheti
    on June 21, meeting with local residents and opening new facilities.

    The president focused on the successes and possible future of the
    province, where over half of the population are of Armenian descent.

    "There are three main factors in this region: one is stability and
    calm, the second is the permanent supply of electricity, which is
    very important, and the third is good roads," the president declared.

    Saakashvili promised that the province will not be neglected.

    "During my first term as president, none of the main roads in
    Javakheti...will remain in poor condition," he said. Saakashvili
    went on to talk of the attractive landscape, natural resources, and
    historical treasure of the area, home to Borjomi's mineral water
    springs and the Vardzia cave monasteries. These bode well for the
    development of the province, he says, where the poverty rate tops 60
    percent and many residents claim to be marginalized by the state.

    "A very important thing has happened in this region over the past
    few years which many people cannot yet see. This region has become
    completely integrated into Georgia."

    Saakashvili, touring a new dairy factory in the village of Spasovka,
    illustrated his optimism by holding aloft a piece of cheese on
    a toothpick.

    "This is not just cheese," he proclaimed to journalists, "this is
    the combination of stability, roads and electricity."

    Saakashvili also traveled to Akhalkalaki district, where he met
    students who failed to pass university entrance exams because they
    did not know Georgian. Saakashvili promised that stipends would be
    given to prospective university students in the province to encourage
    them on their way to a higher education.

    It's proposed that from August, 100 students from the majority ethnic
    Armenian districts of Akhalkalaki and Ninotsminda will receive grants
    to enroll in Tbilisi schools to learn Georgian. Students from the
    impoverished districts now must go to Minsk, Yerevan, Kiev or Russia
    to continue their education in Russian.

    "I offer you a solution-stay in Georgia and learn in your home
    country. We will guarantee you the best education in the whole region,"
    Saakashvili told the students.

    Political analyst Archil Gegeshidze doubts that there are any links
    between Saakashvili's visit to Samtskhe-Javakheti and the current
    discussions on repatriating Meskhetians (most commonly referred to as
    Meskhetian Turks). Rather, he sees this trip as an effort to obviate
    coming disaffection in the region.

    "I think the president went there to somehow bring attention to the
    region. After the withdrawal of the Russian bases [Russian military
    bases, slated for withdrawal in 2008, are a major employer in the
    region] a lot of people will be unemployed. They need to be integrated
    into greater Georgian society and treated carefully. I think that's
    why the president himself visited the region," Gegeshidze told The
    Messenger.
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