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Tbilisi: Armenia angry over Saakashvili's remarks

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  • Tbilisi: Armenia angry over Saakashvili's remarks

    The Messenger, Georgia
    March 13 2009

    Armenia angry over Saakashvili's remarks

    By Mzia Kupunia
    Friday, March 13

    President of Armenia Serzh Sarkisian has placed the responsibility for
    `complicated relations' with Armenia on Georgian President Mikheil
    Saakashvili, the Georgian media says, based on reports from the
    Armenian News Agency News Armenia. `Saakashvili cannot put up with
    Armenia having close relations with Moscow,' the Armenian agency
    quoted Sarkisian as saying.

    The Armenian President's statement comes after Saakashvili's remarks
    on March 7 that `Armenia's economy has been completely crushed,
    because Armenia has been totally dependant on the Russian market. The
    Russian market has collapsed and Armenia's economy has collapsed too.'
    Soon after the Georgian President's speech the Armenian media released
    a statement by Sarkisian's Press Secretary Samvel Farmanian.

    The Press Spokesperson of the Georgian President, Alana Gagloeva, has
    responded by saying that Saakashvili's words were `misunderstood.'
    `Mikheil Saakashvili's words were not meant to offend the Armenian
    Government. His speech was focused on specific events in the
    region. The devaluation of the Armenian national currency, in our
    opinion, has affected the Armenian economy generally. Saakashvili also
    said that the Georgian economy is more defended [from the effects of
    the global economic crisis] because Georgia does not have as high a
    volume trade and economic relations with Russia as Armenia. So the
    words of the Georgian President were not said to offend the Armenian
    Government,' Gagloeva stated.

    The Georgian opposition slammed Saakashvili for the statement. The
    Chairperson of the Democratic Movement`United Georgia and former close
    ally of Saakashvili, Nino Burjanadze, said the Georgian President
    should not give himself the right to make `incorrect and radical'
    statements about the economic problems of other countries. `I am sorry
    that the President of Georgia made such an incorrect comment about
    neighbouring Armenia. Unfortunately it should be said that
    Saakashvili's incorrectness is not news for us, however it is worse
    when it concerns statements addressed to neighbouring states rather
    than statements about internal politics,' Burjanadze noted.

    The former Parliament Speaker said the Georgian Government should pay
    more attention to internal economic problems. `After the August war
    the country has got into a very difficult economic and political
    situation, and due to the incapacity of the Government the threat of
    the situation worsening is growing,' Burjanadze stated. She said the
    Georgian and Armenian people will be wise enough not to take any
    notice of such `unwise' statements.

    On Thursday, at a meeting with Georgia's Ambassador to Armenia Revaz
    Gachechiladze, who is concluding his diplomatic mission in the
    country, the Armenian President thanked him for his successful
    cooperation and said `political dialogue [between the countries] has
    been activated, economic relations have been broadened and cultural
    ties have become stronger.'
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