Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Tanks will go to Abkhazia

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Tanks will go to Abkhazia

    Agency WPS
    What the Papers Say. Part B (Russia)
    June 21, 2005, Tuesday

    TANKS WILL GO TO ABKHAZIA

    SOURCE: Nezavisimaya Gazeta, June 21, 2005, p. 5
    by Yuri Simonjan


    Lieutenant-General Valery Yevnevich, Ground Forces Second-in-Command
    in charge of peacekeeping operations, currently on a visit to
    Georgia, has announced a new route for the withdrawal of Russian
    military bases from Georgia. This concerns Abkhazia, a region no one
    regarded as the potential route until now. The Defense Ministry
    initially intended to withdraw the troops and military hardware to
    Armenia and - via the Batumi port - to Russia. Yevnevich said,
    however, that Russia would make use of Abkhazian roads because the
    Military Georgian Highway was too complicated a route.

    Yevnevich's statement became public knowledge due to Kakhi Ardia,
    Presidential Envoy in Samegrelo-Zemo Svanetia. "General Yevnevich
    assured me that not a single armored vehicle would remain in
    Abkhazia," Ardia said. "He said that withdrawing military hardware
    via the Military Georgian Highway is practically impossible."

    Georgy Volsky, Deputy State Minister for Conflict Resolution, calls
    Yevnevich's statement irrational and politically short-sighted. "The
    Russian Defense Ministry may make this decision, but it will only
    generated additional tension in our relations," Volsky said. "I was
    present at the talks in Moscow, and the Abkhazian route was not even
    mentioned then. Only the transfer of some military hardware to the
    Russian base in Gyumri, Armenia, was mentioned. All the rest was
    supposed to be pulled out to Russia via Batumi."

    Yevnevich visited South Ossetia before going to Tbilisi. The
    situation there noticeably deteriorated last week. Georgia and South
    Ossetia blame each other for the escalation of tension, and the head
    of North Ossetia Teimuraz Mamsurov even proposed a reunification of
    the Ossetian people. Volsky described his statement as an attempt to
    incite unrest.

    Official Tskhinvali was annoyed by an interview with Vaja
    Khachapuridze, South Ossetian Presidential Envoy, with Imkedi (a
    Georgian TV channel) where he did not rule out the possibility of the
    return of the restive republic to Georgian jurisdiction. South
    Ossetian authorities immediately denounced the statement and
    emphasized that "membership of South Ossetia in Georgia, with
    whatever status, is not even considered."

    Translated by A. Ignatkin

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X