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Towards A Break. Georgia Resorts To Extreme Diplomatic Measures

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  • Towards A Break. Georgia Resorts To Extreme Diplomatic Measures

    TOWARDS A BREAK. GEORGIA RESORTS TO EXTREME DIPLOMATIC MEASURES
    by Mikhail Vignanskiy in Tbilisi and by Ivan Solovyev

    Vremya Novostey
    Sept 1 2008
    Russia

    The severance of diplomatic relations between Georgia and Russia is
    the next step towards the disintegration of the once close friendly
    ties that united the peoples of the former USSR. This week Georgia
    will embark on the fulfilment of the parliamentarians' 28 August
    decree in which it is proposed that the executive break off relations
    with Russia as an "occupying" country. There is already a precedent
    for the absence of diplomatic relations between post-Soviet states -
    after the bloody conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh Azerbaijan and Armenia
    never did exchange embassies. However, the severance of previously
    established diplomatic relations between two former Soviet republics
    is happening for the first time.

    Georgian Ambassador to Russia Erosi Kitsmarishvili was recalled to
    Tbilisi for consultations back in 10 July, almost a month before the
    start of hostilities in South Ossetia. As the Georgian Foreign Ministry
    explained to Vremya Novostey, a charge d'affaires and one other
    diplomat are currently working at the Georgian Embassy in Moscow. The
    other staffers, of whom there were 12, have already been recalled to
    the homeland. A note on the severance of diplomatic relations has not
    yet been handed to Georgian Ambassador to Russia Vyacheslav Kovalenko -
    it cannot be ruled out that this will be done today [ 1 September].

    Previously Georgian Foreign Minister Ekaterina Tkeshelashvili had
    claimed that two diplomats would remain in Moscow. At the same time
    Georgian Minister of State for Reintegration Temuri Yakobashvili
    said that it would be possible not to break off relations but to
    "reduce them to a minimum." But later Tbilisi decided to resort to
    extreme measures. "We regret this step on the part of the Georgian
    side. It will not benefit our bilateral relations," Andrey Nesterenko,
    official spokesman for the Russian Foreign Ministry, stated. He noted
    that Russia considers it important to maintain diplomatic channels
    for contacts with Georgia: "Without this channel of communication,
    we will experience difficulties in conveying our views to each other."

    There will not be a complete cessation of contacts as yet - while
    severing diplomatic relations, Georgia will retain a consulate in
    Moscow to serve the interests of its citizens and compatriots. At
    the Georgian Foreign MinistryVremya Novostey was told that the
    consul and two vice consuls will continue to work in the Russian
    capital. Georgia will demand that the Russian side reduce the number
    of its staffers similarly. In this context Vladimir Chizhov, Russia's
    permanent representative to the EU, observed that Tbilisi has chosen
    an "unusual version" of restricting diplomatic ties with Moscow,
    since Georgia is retaining consular functions, which are actually
    part of diplomatic functions.

    Aleksandr Savinov, press attache at the Russian Embassy in Georgia,
    told Vremya Novostey yesterday: "At the moment we are operating as
    before. Georgia's statements about severance have not been confirmed
    by the corresponding note as of now." The Russian Embassy building
    in Georgia is located on the street named for a hero of the Georgian
    uprising against Soviet power in the 1920s, Kakutsa Cholokashvili. In
    recent days pickets of people who are unhappy with Moscow's policy
    have gathered there every day. At the moment Georgian journalists
    are on duty there, hoping not to miss the moment when the diplomats
    start packing their bags.

    At the Georgian Foreign Ministry Vremya Novostey was told that they
    are conducting talks with a number of countries that could represent
    Tbilisi's interests in Moscow after the closure of the Georgian
    Embassy in Russia: "For instance, there is no Japanese Embassy in
    Georgia, but Japan's interests are represented in our country by that
    country's embassy in Armenia. And Kuwait's interests in Georgia are
    represented by the Kuwaiti Embassy in Romania." The Foreign Ministry
    did not clarify precisely which countries Georgia is talking with in
    the "Russian salient," but there have been leaks to the press that
    it could be Ukraine.

    In Washington, White House Press Secretary Dana Perino stated that
    the United States is "not surprised" at George's decision to sever
    diplomatic relations with Russia. Meanwhile Germany expressed regret
    at this decision by Georgia.

    >>From 8 September Georgia is changing the rules for issuing visas
    to Russian citizens. Previously Russian citizens could obtain
    Georgian visas on crossing the Georgian border - for a 90-day stay
    in the country you had to pay approximately $30. From next Monday
    visas will no longer be issued at the border, nor will there be any
    tourist visas. From now on Georgia will receive only those Russian
    citizens who are travelling in order to meet with family members,
    for humanitarian purposes, or on an official or business visit. As
    Vremya Novostey was told at the Georgian diplomatic department,
    citizens of Russia may apply to the consulate in Moscow for a visa,
    bringing the original invitation.

    Moscow abandoned the visa-free regime back in 2000, suspecting Georgia
    of conniving with the sending of gunmen into Chechnya. In 2006, after
    the detention of four Russian officers in Tbilisi on suspicion of
    espionage, Russia temporarily tightened the entry rules. Later there
    were certain relaxations, but the issuing of the most in-demand visas,
    tourist visas, was not resumed.

    Political expert Zurab Abashidze, who held the post of Georgian
    ambassador to Russia in 2000-2004, in an interview for Vremya Novostey,
    explained Tbilisi's decision to sever diplomatic relations with Moscow
    in terms of the "extremely high degree of tension in relations." He
    speculated that restoring diplomatic relations after a while "will be
    difficult, but possible." For example, when there were no diplomatic
    relations between the USSR and Israel, Israel's interests in Moscow
    were partially represented by the Netherlands, but later "everything
    was sorted out."

    Our interlocutor commented that "one can speak of several hundred
    thousand people originally from Georgia who now live in Russia, but
    the majority of them took Russian citizenship after Russia introduced
    the visa regime." "Until now I have travelled easily to visit Mom in
    Tbilisi and obtained a visa at the border," Moscow businessman Mikhail
    K., who was born and raised in Tbilisi but has Russian citizenship,
    told Vremya Novostey. "My friends from Georgia envied me, they could
    not travel to Moscow so easily. Now there will be much more of a
    headache from all this bureaucracy."

    Along with the severance of diplomatic relations, Georgia stated that
    it deems the basic agreement on the Georgian-Abkhazian settlement
    signed in Moscow 14 May 1994 to have lost its force. It was on the
    basis of this document that Russian peacekeeping forces were sent
    into the conflict zone under CIS auspices. Tbilisi will henceforth be
    guided by the Georgian Parliament's decrees "On Peacekeeping Forces
    Stationed in Georgian Territory" of 18 July 2006 (at that time it was
    proposed that the executive declare the "blue berets" to be outside
    the law, but that decision was not put into practice) and "On the
    Occupation of Georgian Territories by the Russian Federation" of 28
    August 2008. In this context the Georgian Government stated that it
    remains true to the six-point agreement reached in August through
    the mediation of French President Nicolas Sarkozy.
    From: Baghdasarian
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