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Midnight Train From Georgia Sees Russia Complete Military Pullout

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  • Midnight Train From Georgia Sees Russia Complete Military Pullout

    MIDNIGHT TRAIN FROM GEORGIA SEES RUSSIA COMPLETE MILITARY PULLOUT

    RIA Novosti, Russia
    Nov 15 2007

    MOSCOW, November 15 (RIA Novosti) - Russia has completed a pullout of
    military personnel and equipment from a Soviet-era base in Batumi,
    Georgia, an aide to the chief of the Russian Ground Forces said
    on Thursday.

    The last train containing Russian servicemen and property left the
    base in southern Georgia for Armenia, at 01:10 a.m. local time on
    Thursday (09:10 p.m. GMT on Wednesday).

    "The train is en route to the 102nd military base in the town of
    Gyumri in Armenia," Col. Igor Konashenkov said, adding that it would
    reach its destination by Thursday night.

    The Batumi base commander, the commander of Russia's contingent in
    the South Caucasus, as well as 150 servicemen and their families are
    on the train, which is also carrying some 200 metric tons of equipment.

    The Batumi pullout means that no Russian troops remain in Georgia
    except for peacekeepers in the breakaway regions of Abkhazia and
    South Ossetia, said General of the Army Alexei Maslov, the Ground
    Forces commander.

    Under an agreement between the former Soviet republics, Russia was
    to complete the closure of its base in Batumi by the end of 2008.

    Last December, Russia completed the pullout of its military garrison
    from Tbilisi, handing over control of its headquarters to Georgia's
    Defense Ministry, and formally handed over its military base at
    Akhalkalaki in southern Georgia to Tbilisi in June, ahead of the
    October 2007 deadline.

    The tiny Caucasus nation has sought to join NATO and other European
    organizations since U.S.-educated President Mikheil Saakashvili came
    to power on the back of street protests in 2003.

    However, similar opposition demonstrations against Saakashvili last
    week led to the announcement of early presidential elections, set for
    January 5. Saakashvili has blamed Russia for tension in the country,
    expelling three Russian diplomats on November 8.
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