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Moscow Demands Halt Of Weapons Shipments To Georgia

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  • Moscow Demands Halt Of Weapons Shipments To Georgia

    MOSCOW DEMANDS HALT OF WEAPONS SHIPMENTS TO GEORGIA

    Asbarez
    http://www.asbarez.com/2009/08/06/moscow-demands- halt-of-weapons-shipments-to-georgia/
    Aug 6, 2009

    MOSCOW/VIENNA (Europe News)-Western countries must stop weapons
    shipments to Georgia, Russia warned on Thursday, on the eve of the
    first anniversary of its conflict with Georgia.

    In an interview broadcast on Russian media, Foreign Ministry spokesman
    Andrei Nesterenko urged Western nations not to encourage Georgia to
    pursue military ventures by providing it with military aid.

    Such military support leads Georgia to think it can solve its problems
    militarily, not diplomatically, warned Nesterenko.

    Georgia and Russia will both mark the one-year anniversary of the
    war this weekend, in which the two fought over the status of two
    breakaway Georgian republics, Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

    In remarks carried by Interfax news agency from Ankara, visiting
    Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin stressed that Moscow had no
    interest in use of arms in the Caucasus region.

    Russia, said Putin, had no plans to attack Georgia-no matter what
    the government in Tbilisi said-and he also urged an end to the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

    "Conflicts only disrupt the development of our relations with the
    other side," Interfax quoted him as saying.

    Thousands of Georgian students meanwhile arrived by bus on Thursday
    in the city of Gori to protest the "Russian occupiers."

    Russian soldiers had last year temporarily occupied the town, the
    birthplace of Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin, after Georgia invaded
    South Ossetia.

    In the aftermath of the war, both breakaway regions claimed
    independence and enjoy Russian recognition and support. However,
    very few other nations recognize their statehood.

    In the lead-up to the anniversary, the two countries have traded
    accusations that the other is preparing for new military aggression.

    The situation has alarmed international bodies. The European Union,
    which maintains a force of over 200 monitors in Georgia, on Monday
    warned both sides to refrain from stoking tensions.

    The current chairwoman of the Organization for Security and Co-
    operation in Europe, Greek Foreign Minister Dora Bakoyannis, said
    that all sides should refrain from actions and statements that could
    destabilize the situation further.

    "Wounds are still raw, and the region remains fragile and volatile,"
    she said in a statement released by the Vienna-based body that includes
    Russia and the United States among its members.

    The head of human-rights body the Council of Europe, Terry Davis,
    echoed that call, warning that both sides are acting irresponsibly
    and stoking tensions in the Caucasus exactly as they did before they
    went to war a year ago.

    "They are marking the first anniversary of their conflict with
    rhetoric and tension. This is how the shooting started a year ago,"
    Davis said in a statement.

    "While some Georgian and Russian politicians still shout at each other
    and argue about who started it, the rest of us should remember both the
    dead and the living ... the thousands of people who were forced from
    their homes and have still not been allowed to return," Davis said.

    As Moscow blocked the extension of military observer missions by the
    United Nations and the OSCE, both organizations had to withdraw from
    Georgia in late June.

    The EU's mission remains in the country.
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