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Georgian leader hails regional cooperation in oil pipeline inaugurat

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  • Georgian leader hails regional cooperation in oil pipeline inaugurat

    Georgian leader hails regional cooperation in oil pipeline inauguration speech

    Channel 1, Tbilisi
    13 Jul 06

    Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili has said that the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline is opening new prospects for regional
    cooperation. He was speaking at the pipeline inauguration ceremony
    in the Turkish port of Ceyhan on 13 July. Saakashvili said that the
    pipeline project had led to "a completely new political situation"
    in the region in which there was no longer any place for "a policy of
    diktat". He also said that regional economic projects were transforming
    their participants into "some of the most dynamically developing
    countries in the whole world". The following is an excerpt from
    Saakashvili's speech, which was broadcast live by Georgian Public
    Television Channel 1:

    [Saakashvili] Your excellencies, esteemed President Sezer, President
    Aliyev and Prime Minister Erdogan, ladies and gentlemen.

    For us, today's ceremony and the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline
    mean far more than an economic, political or energy project. This is
    a historic prerequisite for our countries' freedom and independence
    and a solid foundation for our future success. This project is very
    important because - together with the [Sah Daniz] gas pipeline project
    which is also very important for Georgia - it marks the end of an era
    of one type of relations and the beginning of a completely new era in
    relations and a completely new political situation in our region. From
    now on, the possibility of confrontational methods and a policy of
    diktat being used is ending and a completely new era is starting
    in the Caucasus and the wider region which includes Central Asia,
    post-Soviet space and Turkey. A new political reality is emerging,
    which is based on cooperation and respect for mutual interests.

    During the discussion of this project, my country Georgia has often
    been referred to as a corridor. [Smiles] I would like to state
    categorically that Georgia is not a corridor. Generally, I do not
    accept the concept of a corridor. A corridor is surrounded by walls and
    is an enclosed space, no matter now big the building is. In reality,
    what is happening today means that we have created one large space
    rather than corridors and terminals. This is a space for cooperation,
    mutual understanding and friendship between our countries.

    A completely new reality has formed within Georgia as well. We have
    been cooperating very well with BP and other companies working here.

    A completely new economic reality is emerging. I can tell you frankly
    that for several years, before the Rose Revolution in 2003, the oil
    pipeline project was the only source of Georgia's economic growth.

    The project has effectively been completed, yet this year the Georgian
    economy will grow much faster thanks to other local economic factors.

    A synergy has emerged. We have managed to create a completely new
    reality. Not only have we changed our strategic energy [supply] lines,
    but we have also completely changed the domestic energy distribution
    system in Georgia and created a new investment climate.

    The fact that there is no longer corruption in Georgia - I declare this
    with a full sense of responsibility - has allowed us to achieve this:
    whereas a year ago we were unsuccessfully pleading with several large
    foreign companies to buy our power grid for one dollar and operate it,
    several weeks ago, that is a year later, we sold just a part of the
    same grid for several hundred million dollars. That is the result of
    more effective administration and a more transparent environment free
    of corruption.

    We are moving into a new era. In the Soviet period we were told who
    we were supposed to like and who we were not supposed to. Not only
    were we forbidden to have warm relations with Turkey, but the Soviet
    regime's ideology was that Turkey was the Georgians' enemy. Today
    and yesterday I have been telling our Turkish brothers that in the
    space of just a few years Turkey's consistent, generous, friendly
    and fraternal attitude has completely negated many decades of work
    by Soviet ideologists.

    For Georgia today, Turkey is a most important partner and a great
    friend. We have entered a phase of great cooperation with Turkey.

    Turkey is fast becoming Georgia's leading trading partner. Turkey
    is fast becoming, and will probably become, the leading investor
    in Georgia.

    I remember well that when two years ago Prime Minister Erdogan arrived
    for the first time in a destroyed and devastated Batumi, we together
    went to the border crossing where there were long queues of suffering
    citizens who needed to get Turkish or Georgian visas. We promised
    each other that there would be no visas needed for travel between
    Georgia and Turkey.

    Now Georgia and Turkey have one of the most transparent and free
    borders. This used to be a border between NATO and the Soviet bloc,
    a border with the largest number of restrictions and bans, but now it
    is one of the most transparent, easily negotiable and friendly borders
    in the region between two fraternal states. That is the result of a
    decision by politicians who care about their people.

    The prime minister and I also decided that Batumi airport would
    be in joint use. This decision was taken, and Batumi airport will
    open in November, as will a new Tbilisi airport terminal, which is
    being built by Turkish companies. It means that Batumi and Tbilisi -
    especially Batumi from November, which is a new development - will be
    linked to the whole world via Istanbul with daily services or perhaps
    several services a day.

    I talked earlier about our experience with Turkish business and
    the arrival of many business people in Georgia. Many construction
    companies have arrived. In these companies, side by side with Turkish
    engineers, Georgian specialists are working and learning to use modern
    working methods. This happened during the oil pipeline project and is
    happening now in the wider construction industry. [Passage omitted:
    more on Turkish business involvement in Georgia]

    That is real cooperation, a real synergy. We no longer have corruption,
    we have reduced taxes, and we have opened borders. The governments
    have done everything possible to facilitate access to markets. For
    the first time, under a low taxation regime, 1m bottles of Georgian
    wine will enter Turkey this year. That will be the first time in
    history. Georgian agricultural produce is also entering Turkey at a
    time when it faces certain problems on other markets.

    I think that this kind of cooperation as well as the development we
    are witnessing in Azerbaijan - [changes tack] We are very pleased about
    that because, again, no other state is closer to us. Such development
    and mutual assistance will allow us to create completely new prospects
    for our people.

    We have arrived here after going through a very difficult period. We
    were in a very difficult situation. But the situation is changing
    radically. We are happy about it, our people are happy about it,
    although there may also be forces that do not particularly like that.

    Likewise, the Kars-Akhalkalaki railway project we are currently working
    on is a new transport link. The Kars-Akhalkalaki railway means the
    creation of hundreds or thousands of jobs in the Javakheti region
    of Georgia [area in southern Georgia populated mainly by ethnic
    Armenians], a completely new transport infrastructure, and a new
    strategic significance for the region.

    The oil and gas pipelines, new airports, new railways - it was hard to
    imagine all that not so long ago. Not so long ago our countries were
    described as weak, flawed and unstable countries whose prospects were
    poor. Now these are some of the most dynamically developing countries
    in the whole world, which have become examples of development,
    consolidation and vision of the future for many other nations and
    countries.

    [Passage omitted: switches to English and the broadcast continues with
    a Georgian translation superimposed; Saakashvili thanks BP for its
    courage and long-term vision, welcomes the creation of alternative
    energy routes, looks forward to new projects]

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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