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Second Trainload Of Equipment Leaves Russian Garrison In Georgia

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  • Second Trainload Of Equipment Leaves Russian Garrison In Georgia

    SECOND TRAINLOAD OF EQUIPMENT LEAVES RUSSIAN GARRISON IN GEORGIA

    RIA Novosti, Russia
    Nov 23 2006

    TBILISI, November 23 (RIA Novosti) - A second trainload of equipment
    and ammunition left a Russian garrison outside the Georgian capital,
    Tbilisi, on Thursday, in keeping with Russia's commitment to withdraw
    from its military bases in the post-Soviet Caucasus state by the end
    of 2008.

    Russia's South Caucasus Command said the train set off from the suburb
    of Vaziani at 5 a.m., and is heading for Russia through Azerbaijan.

    The Vaziani garrison will be pulled out before the end of the year,
    ahead of the earliest of the withdrawal deadlines for Russian forces in
    the South Caucasus state, set for 2007. The defense minister decided
    on an early pullout in mid-October, amid a diplomatic feud between
    the former Soviet allies.

    The Vaziani base had about a hundred items of equipment and 350 metric
    tons of ammunition before the first consignment was withdrawn a week
    ago for redeployment to a base in neighboring Armenia.

    Two more consignments are slated for removal in December, with one to
    be sent to Armenia, and the other to Russia. The garrison's 387 service
    personnel will leave once the equipment pullout has been completed.

    Russia and Georgia have been locked in a bitter diplomatic dispute
    since September, when four Russian army officers were briefly arrested
    in Tbilisi on suspicion of espionage.

    The move outraged Moscow, which cut transportation and postal links
    with its neighbor in response, deported hundreds of Georgian migrants
    and shut down Georgian-run businesses for alleged violations of
    Russian law.

    Georgia's Western-leaning leadership, which seeks to join NATO, is
    uneasy about Russia's continued military presence, and has repeatedly
    urged Moscow to withdraw from its Soviet-era bases.

    Under a bilateral agreement signed in March 2006 and ratified by
    Russia's parliament in October, the pullout from the Russian bases in
    the southern city of Akhalkalaki and in Batumi, in western Georgia, is
    to be completed by October 1, 2007, and October 1, 2008, respectively.
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