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NPR Transcript: Patriot camps cause concern in former Soviet Republi

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  • NPR Transcript: Patriot camps cause concern in former Soviet Republi

    National Public Radio (NPR)
    SHOW: Morning Edition 11:00 AM EST NPR
    October 12, 2005 Wednesday

    Patriot camps cause concern in former Soviet Republic [DP]

    ANCHORS: RENEE MONTAGNE

    REPORTERS: LAWRENCE SHEETS


    In the former Soviet Republic of Georgia, thousands of young people
    have been attending voluntary Patriot camps. The government says the
    camps help to counter cynicism and hopelessness among young
    Georgians, but the camps feature basic military training and they've
    been criticized by Georgia's political opposition. NPR's Lawrence
    Sheets reports.

    Unidentified Man: (Foreign language spoken)

    LAWRENCE SHEETS reporting:

    Along the lush green mountainside, military officers in tan fatigues
    bark out commands to young men and women dressed in orange and blue
    uniforms and caps emblazoned with the word `Patriot.' The military
    officers pass out loaded Kalashnikov rifle magazines to the 15- to
    20-year-olds who stand at attention.

    (Soundbite of a rifle)

    SHEETS: Marika Bayurmanyan(ph), a university student from the capital
    of Tbilisi, lies down in a firing trench.

    What does it feel like when you're shooting a Kalashnikov?

    Ms. MARIKA BAYURMANYAN (University Student): I don't know. I think
    that's great.

    SHEETS: A military trainer help Marika steady the weapon as she
    unloads a hail of bullets at white targets about 80 yards away.

    (Soundbite of gunfire)

    SHEETS: Marika's one of more than 15,000 young people attending the
    10-day Patriot camps this year. Next year the Georgian government
    says 100,000 will attend. Sergeant Yorgi Tzeveteli(ph) says the
    military aspect is secondary.

    Sergeant YORGI TZEVETELI: (Through Translator) This training provides
    the young people a basis for how to handle weapons. This is not
    enough for them. The main principle is to raise their spirits as
    patriots.

    SHEETS: The government of President Mikhail Sakashvili says the camps
    are needed to induce young Georgians with a sense of discipline and
    national pride. Sakashvili recently spoke with several hundred young
    patriots after they completed camp.

    President MIKHAIL SAKASHVILI: (Through Translator) Two years ago, our
    country was laughed at and ridiculed, above all by its own government
    and president. Not only did they have no idea what governing a
    country was about, but they did not have any self-respect and
    dignity. They were not proud to be Georgian.

    SHEETS: Another idea behind the camps is ethnic integration.
    Relations between minorities and ethnic Georgians are not always
    smooth. Marika Bayurmanyan, an Armenian herself, says the camps try
    to break down those barriers.

    Ms. BAYURMANYAN: Yeah, we have different nationalities and the
    children, for example, Armenians or others--children are from all
    parts of Georgia, and they learn how to communicate with each other,
    with children from different parts of Georgia.

    SHEETS: But critics, like opposition lawmaker Pata Zakarashvili(ph),
    say the Georgian Patriot camps are just an updated version of the
    Soviet Pioneer camps.

    Mr. PATA ZAKARASHVILI (Opposition Lawmaker): (Through Translator)
    This is dangerous. Sakashvili wants to instill these people with his
    own ideology. He wants to mobilize the young people so that they
    don't mobilize against him.

    SHEETS: Zakarashvili says the weapons training in the Patriot camps
    is part of a campaign by the government to encourage militant
    attitudes and prepare people psychologically for new wars against
    Georgia's two separatist regions, Abkhazia and South Ossetia. But
    even the opposition admits the camps are popular. Many of the kids
    are from poor backgrounds. Drug abuse, unemployment and street crime
    have exploded in Georgia since the Soviet collapse. And many parents
    are happy to keep their kids off the streets, if only for a couple of
    weeks. Lawrence Sheets, NPR News, Bakuriani, Georgia.
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