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Abkhaz separatists left dangling by Russia

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  • Abkhaz separatists left dangling by Russia

    Agence France Presse
    March 21, 2008 Friday


    Abkhaz separatists left dangling by Russia

    by Olga Nedbayeva
    SUKHUMI, Georgia, March 21 2008


    In Sukhumi's main train station, once at the centre of a thriving
    tourist trade, the only train still rolling is a four-carriage affair
    to the town of Adler across the border in Russia.

    The ghostly scene at the shuttered station symbolises Abkhazia, a
    rebel province of Georgia seeking independence but whose sole support
    from the outside world comes from Russia.

    Without that train, which runs three times a week, and without a
    trickle of Russian trade and even tourists, Abkhazia would struggle
    to survive.

    But what the Abkhaz rebels really want -- to be recognised in the
    same way that Western governments have recognised Kosovo's
    independence from Serbia -- remains frustratingly distant.

    "We are waiting for concrete steps like the signing of a military
    alliance and not loud words," said Stanislav Lakoba, head of the
    separatists' security council.

    Russia, which backs Serbia in the Kosovo dispute, earlier this month
    announced a lifting of trade restrictions with Abkhazia, a move
    Georgia denounced as encouraging separatism.

    On Friday, the Russian parliament was expected to vote in favour of
    recognising Abkhazia if pro-Western Georgia ever joins NATO.

    But Lakoba says Moscow is just playing games.

    "They treat Abkhazia the same way they play football, preferring to
    make useless passes and avoid responsibility, rather than scoring a
    goal," he said. The weekly newspaper Nuzhnaya is even more scathing
    about rebel Abkhazia's benefactor: "Russia's behaviour is like the
    promise of the psychiatric hospital doctor to fill the swimming pool
    with water once the patients learn to swim."

    Nestled under the forested Caucasus mountains on the palm-fringed
    shore of the Black Sea, Abkhazia has real economic potential for
    tourism and agriculture.

    But the picturesque capital Sukhumi is a ghost town, heavily scarred
    from the fighting in the early 1990s in which nearly all
    ethnic-Georgians -- half of the population -- were driven from their
    homes.

    Some in Abkhazia are pinning their hopes on a surge in trade when
    Russia hosts the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, but major investment
    would be needed to rebuild the economy.

    Railways chief Guram Gubaz says it would take "at least 200 million
    dollars (130 million euros)" to fix the line which until the war ran
    all the way from Russia to Armenia.

    Narine, a 38-year-old engineer, is typical of many in Sukhumi, where
    employment is scarce, the streets are almost empty of traffic, and
    many houses remain ruined and abandoned.

    She sells newspapers every day of the week -- and anything else to
    make a living. "I never turn down work. I distribute beauty products,
    I make cakes," she said.

    "I earn just enough to buy food and nice clothes for my 15-year-old
    daughter," Narine said.

    Beslan Baratelia, one of the leaders of the Economic Development
    Party of Abkhazia, said that average monthly salaries were between
    100 and 200 dollars.

    "But most income is unofficial. People resell Russian products, host
    tourists, and live off their vegetable gardens."

    Narine said the real future, at least for her daughter, is with
    Russia. "She must do her finance studies in Russia -- she'll have
    more chances."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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