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Tanks Rolling North: Withdrawal Of Troops From Georgia: ScandalsCont

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  • Tanks Rolling North: Withdrawal Of Troops From Georgia: ScandalsCont

    TANKS ROLLING NORTH: WITHDRAWAL OF TROOPS FROM GEORGIA: SCANDALS CONTINUE
    Albert Yeremjan, Mikhail Moshkin

    Source: Gazeta, May 16, 2006
    Agency WPS
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    May 19, 2006 Friday

    Twenty-One Echelon With Military Hardware, Armaments And Material
    Will Leave The Russian Base In Akhalkalaki (Georgia) Before October;
    An update on the withdrawal from Georgia.

    Russia is pulling out. The accords signed in Sochi this March, give
    Russia until 2008, to withdraw from Georgia completely. The matter
    concerns Russian military bases in Batumi and Akhalkalaki.

    It took the military two days to load all armored vehicles of
    the 62nd Base (Akhalkalaki) on flatcars at Tsalka station in East
    Georgia. The process began on Saturday. Carrying seven T-72 tanks,
    eight armored battle vehicles, two armored personnel carriers, and
    four communications vehicles, the echelon departed for Russia via
    Azerbaijan, yesterday.

    "Running echelons across Azerbaijan will simplify matters, because it
    will do away with the necessity to unload the military hardware from
    flatcars and load it again to a different transport means," Russian
    Army Group in the Caucasus Second-in-Command Vladimir Kuparadze told
    this correspondent. "The military hardware loaded in Tsalka will ride
    the flatcars right to the destination in Russia." Kuparadze did not
    say what units of the Russian army were under orders to receive and
    store the military hardware. Tactical and auxiliary teams made it to
    Tsalka last week.

    Departure of the second echelon is scheduled for May 23.

    Twenty-one echelon with military hardware, armaments, and material
    of the Akhalkalaki base will leave Tsalka before October, 2006.

    The locals, mostly Armenians, are vexed to see the Russians pull out.

    It is hardly surprising because the Russian base provided them with
    jobs. Special forces of the Georgian Interior Ministry were moved to
    Akhalkalaki on the night of May 13, to deal with all and any potential
    disturbances. Defense Minister Irakly Okruashvili had said not long
    before that Russia was orchestrating "provocations" in Akhalkalaki
    "to be able to claim that it was the indigenous population that was
    interfering with the withdrawal."

    Along with everything else, official Tbilisi accuses Moscow of
    dereliction of its commitments with regard to the Gudauta base on the
    territory of the unrecognized Republic of Abkhazia. The Georgians
    demand international monitoring while Moscow replies that the base
    is closed. The NATO delegation on a visit to Georgia last week was
    not permitted to see the base. NATO representatives said that had had
    Russia's consent to a visit the base but the permit was annulled at
    the last moment.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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