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  • Political minefield offers rich pickings for jokes

    The New Zealand Herald
    Monday September 10, 2007

    Blog: Political minefield offers rich pickings for jokes


    The 14th century Tsminda Sameba church overlooked by
    5047m Mt Kazbek. Photo / Jill Worrall

    9:55AM Monday September 10, 2007
    By Jill Worrall
    There's little work available in the Georgian town of
    Kazbegi, just 20km from the Russian border.

    The two nations are not on speaking terms at present
    so the border is closed. Kazbegi is now without its
    usual rumble and belch of trucks, buses and vans -
    it's a forlorn place where men sit in doorways with
    nothing to do.

    So, I'm not altogether surprised when the jeep drivers
    tell us it's not safe to walk up to the 14th century
    Tsminda Sameba church that sits perched on a hill
    overlooked by 5047m Mt Kazbek, Georgia's highest
    mountain.

    "There are two bears on the path," they tell us,
    seriously. We should take the jeeps to be safe. So we
    do.

    Interestingly the black-robed priest and his small
    flock of pilgrims who take the path arrive safely at
    the church - maybe they had a higher level of divine
    protection.

    The closed border is a graphic example of why the
    Caucasus would be no place to cut one's teeth in the
    field of international relations.

    While Georgia and Russia are at loggerheads, Georgia
    and Azerbaijan are talking to each other so their
    borders are open. But don't even contemplate trying to
    cross from Azerbaijan into Armenia - those two nations
    are bristling with tension over disputed territory.


    Armenia is however, friendly with Iran,
    which in turn is regarded a little guardedly by
    Georgia and Azerbaijan.

    Meanwhile, Armenia and Turkey are caught in
    long-standing enmity. And to compound things further
    Armenia and Georgia are possibly a little envious of
    the Azeris' oil-fields, while Georgia and Azerbaijan
    seem a little miffed about the amount of money Armenia
    receives from its wealthy diaspora.

    It's rich pickings for collectors of national jokes
    too.

    Georgians, for example, are teased about their claims
    to be the first to make wine, along with several other
    "firsts".

    The region is the political geographer's paradise - a
    soap opera of kinship, enmity, envy, spies and the
    usual pot pourri of other human emotions that can both
    divide and unite.




    The Tsminda Sameba church . Photo / Jill Worrall
    But political minefields seem a long way away up at
    the little stone church of Tsminda Sameba where the
    wind billows the priest's gowns and Mt Kazbek and its
    snowfields loom on the skyline on a cloudless blue
    Caucasian day.
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