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Georgia Bans Russian Military Transport Flyovers

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  • Georgia Bans Russian Military Transport Flyovers

    GEORGIA BANS RUSSIAN MILITARY TRANSPORT FLYOVERS

    Kommersant, Russia
    Dec 12 2006

    At the end of last week, the Russian Foreign Ministry demanded
    that Georgia "immediately stop its sabotage of the Agreement on the
    Organization of Transit of Military Cargo and Personal across Georgian
    Territory" and again accused Tbilisi of inflaming tensions in bilateral
    relations. Kommersant has learned that Tbilisi responded today. Georgia
    is demanding that the Russian Ministry of Defense pay its debt for
    the servicing of military planes when the fly over Georgian territory.

    At the end of last week, the Russian Foreign Ministry demanded
    that Georgia "immediately stop its sabotage of the Agreement on the
    Organization of Transit of Military Cargo and Personal across Georgian
    Territory" and again accused Tbilisi of inflaming tensions in bilateral
    relations. Kommersant has learned that Tbilisi responded today. Georgia
    is demanding that the Russian Ministry of Defense pay its debt for
    the servicing of military planes when the fly over Georgian territory.

    Mikhail Kamynin, a spokesman of the Russian Foreign Ministry, said
    that the ministry was referring to "Georgia's ignoring the request
    for the fulfillment of planes flights by Russian planes between
    December 8 and 22" to the Russian military base in the Armenian city
    of Gyumri. Although the appropriate request was sent in a timely
    manner to Tbilisi, according to Kamynin, it was "simply left without
    reply." Moscow took that as an "intentional attempt to impede not
    only normal functioning of the base at Gyumri," but the withdrawal of
    Russian of Russian forces from Georgia as well. On Saturday, Georgian
    Ambassador to Russia Irakly Chubinishvili was summoned to the Russian
    Foreign Ministry, where he was informed of the Russian position.

    At the Georgian Foreign Ministry, the Kommersant correspondent
    was told that a response to the Russian statement would be made on
    Monday. The Georgian Ministry of Defense told Kommersant that that
    ministry "is not sabotaging Russian military planes" since servicing of
    planes flying over Georgian territory is carried out by the civilian
    Gruzaeronavigatsia."

    An employee of Gruzaeronavigatsia who wished to remain anonymous said
    that Russia owes Gruzaeronavigatsia a significant sum of money for
    servicing its military aircraft. The source refused to name the exact
    sum, but noted that "if the Russian side prohibited air flyovers from
    Georgia to Russia on the pretext of mythic debts for the servicing of
    nonexistent Georgian air companies, the Georgian side would also have
    the right to rise the question of covering the debt of the Russian
    Defense Ministry in relation to Gruzaeronavigatsia. For service of
    flyovers across the territory of Georgia."
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