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Saakashvili Against Reopening Railway Via Abkhazia

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  • Saakashvili Against Reopening Railway Via Abkhazia

    SAAKASHVILI AGAINST REOPENING RAILWAY VIA ABKHAZIA

    Civil Georgia, Tbilisi / 17 Jan.'13 / 19:54

    Reopening of a railway via breakaway Abkhazia is in Russia's interest
    and addressing this issue outside the context of de-occupation will be
    "criminal, anti-state, anti-Georgian" act, President Saakashvili said
    on January 17.

    He made the remarks when asked during a press conference in Tbilisi
    to comment on PM Bidzina Ivanishvili's statement made earlier on the
    same day while visiting Armenia.

    Asked during the press conference in Yerevan if restoration of the
    railway link between Georgia and Russia via Abkhazia, which could
    also link Armenia to Russia, was possible, Georgian PM Ivanishvili
    responded: "It's possible." He, however, added that the issue was
    complicated because of troubled relations between Georgia and Russian
    and because of "uneasy relations with our Abkhaz brothers".

    "You know that there are no problems in relationships between
    Georgia and Armenia," Ivanishvili said. "But we have huge problems
    in relationship with Russia. The problems were huge and they
    unfortunately still remain. We try it to restore and mend ties with
    Russia. Profound and the most problematic issue is about Georgia's
    territorial integrity."

    Ivanishvili, however, also said that the issue of railway could
    be resolved in case of a political will from all the parties. "The
    Georgian side voiced its readiness in this regard. On our part there
    is full readiness for solving all the issues as soon as possible,"
    Ivanishvili added.

    Commenting on PM's remarks President Saakashvili told journalists
    that "the statement has several elements and all of these elements
    are very alarming."

    "This is the statement which does not at all take into consideration
    Georgia's geopolitical and strategic interests," Saakashvili said.

    He said that after new Baku-Akhalkalaki-Karsi railway link, connecting
    Azerbaijan to Turkey via Georgia, is put into operation "there will
    be actually no need for Georgia" in a railway via Abkhazia because
    Georgia would have an alternative route towards Europe in a form of
    the Baku-Akhalkalaki-Kars railway.

    Saakashvili said that the Baku-Akhalkalaki-Karsi railway would connect
    Asia with Europe and thus would represent a competitor to Russia's
    Trans-Siberian Railway.

    "Our railway poses a huge threat to the Trans-Siberian Railway; it's a
    huge competitor to the Trans-Siberian Railway. We created a competitor
    to Russia in respect of energy transit corridor and likewise we are
    now creating a competitor to Russia in terms of cargo transportation,"
    Saakashvili said.

    "What Russia wants is to destroy this [alternative] route for cargo
    transportation," Saakashvili said.

    "Secondly, with the reopening of this railway [via Abkhazia]
    Russia wants to actually legitimize Abkhazia's occupation, because
    in the condition when the Russian Railway seized Abkhaz [section]
    of the railway and in the condition when the Russian Railway also
    owns the Armenian railway based on an agreement with Armenia, the
    status of reopening this railway [via Abkhazia] will be completely
    unacceptable, because Russia considers Abkhazia... as independent
    states," Saakashvili said.

    "Georgia should take not a single step that will contribute to it,
    unless de-occupation of Abkhazia is fully resolved; or this issue
    can be resolved in parallel with de-occupation of Abkhazia and can
    be discussed as part of the de-occupation," he said.

    "Discussing this issue [of railway reopening] separately is criminal,
    anti-state, anti-Georgian, anti-national act, which is fundamentally
    in the interest of the occupying force," Saakashvili said.

    "I think that those who make such statements and such statements
    are made by the Georgian government they either have no idea about
    strategic political interests of Georgia or they wittingly undermine
    Georgia's foreign policy vector, Georgia's independence, Georgia's
    future and act directly upon orders from the occupying force. I have
    no other explanations about it; this is very categorical statement
    unfortunately, but I have to tell the truth to my people."

    "I can't remain silent when it is said that we should implement
    Russia's big plan about railway," Saakashvili said, adding that
    history will not forgive him if he does not speak out now.

    "We of course want good relations with Armenia and we have done much
    for it," Saakashvili said, adding that reopening of Larsi border
    checkpoint with Russia aimed just this purpose.

    "It has never been in Georgia's interests to isolate Armenia,"
    he said. "But one thing is having good relations with Armenia and
    another - implementation strategic plans of the occupying force."

    "At the same time we should take into consideration that such
    statements and statements like those questioning Karsi-Akhalkalaki
    railway project of course strains our relations with our other
    neighbors. As you know we have now unfortunately seriously complicated
    relations with Turkey and it is demonstrated in many issues - many
    Turkish investments have been suspended," Saakashvili said, adding
    that "by creating any problems in [ties] with Turkey we are losing
    the historic chance of joining NATO."

    In early 2006 Georgia was in talks with Russia and Armenia about
    potential joint consortium to deal with multi-million project of
    rehabilitating Abkhaz section of the railway; those talks, however,
    yielded no tangible results.

    In a November, 2012 public opinion survey, commissioned by the U.S.

    National Democratic Institute (NDI), 68% of Georgian respondents said
    they would approve reestablishment of a railway link between Georgia
    and Russia via breakaway Abkhazia; 6% disapproved and 24% did not know.

    http://www.civil.ge/eng/article.php?id=25651

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