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Georgia: Officials Blame Nation's 'Enemies' For Tbilisi Bomb Blast

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  • Georgia: Officials Blame Nation's 'Enemies' For Tbilisi Bomb Blast

    Radio Free Europe, Czech Republic
    April 7 2004

    Georgia: Officials Blame Nation's 'Enemies' For Tbilisi Bomb Blast
    By Jean-Christophe Peuch

    Prague, 7 April 2004 (RFE/RL) -- Georgian law-enforcement agencies
    have launched an investigation into yesterday's bomb attack that
    purportedly targeted the commander of the Russian armed forces in the
    Transcaucasus.


    General Aleksandr Studenikin was slightly injured last night as he
    was walking from the Russian forces' headquarters in Tbilisi to his
    home near the base.

    Studenikin's deputy, General Andrei Popov, said Studenikin sustained
    only minor injuries to his arm, leg, and face. "The life of the
    Russian forces' commander is not under threat. He successfully
    underwent surgery, and he is currently recovering at [the Russian]
    military hospital," Popov said.

    Studenikin was reportedly hit by pieces of concrete as a
    remote-controlled bomb tore off the wall of a building he was walking
    by. The 49-year-old Studenikin has been in charge of Russian forces
    in the Transcaucasus since September 2003. Prior to that date, he
    fought in Chechnya.

    This is the first time since Georgia regained its independence in
    1991 that Russian troops stationed in the country have been the
    target of an apparent politically motivated attack. The kidnapping
    and murder of Russian Colonel Igor Zaitsev in 2002 has been generally
    linked to shady business dealings.

    Russia's Georgian-based forces are garrisoned in the autonomous
    republic of Adjaria and in the predominantly ethnic Armenian region
    of Samtskhe-Djavakheti. Tbilisi has been demanding that Moscow comply
    with a 1999 international agreement and vacates the Batumi and
    Akhalkalaki bases as soon as possible.

    The election of Mikheil Saakashvili as Georgia's new leader in
    January gave new impetus to negotiations on a possible time frame for
    the Russian withdrawal. Georgian officials say they are optimistic an
    agreement can be reached soon.

    The Russian Defense Ministry on 29 March said it has halved its
    presence in Georgia to 2,000 troops over the past few months. These
    figures, however, are impossible to verify.

    Georgian and Russian media today are speculating on the possible
    motives for the purported attack against Studenikin. The most widely
    cited possible reasons include the tense situation in Adjaria, the
    ongoing Russian-Georgian cooperation against transnational crime, and
    the war in neighboring Chechnya.

    There has been no claim of responsibility for the attack. However,
    Georgian Security Council Secretary Vano Merabishvili yesterday
    pointed to alleged "enemies of Georgia" opposed to a rapprochement
    with Russia. "This act is a provocation organized by forces who do
    not want the [political] situation in the country to remain stable
    and Russia and Georgian to normalize their relations," Merabishvili
    said.

    Merabishvili described the blast as an "act of terrorism," although
    he said the perpetrators probably did not intend to kill Studenikin.
    "Everyone believes the aim of this act was not to kill but rather to
    sow fear," he said. "But that doesn't change anything. We're happy
    nobody was killed. But this incident in itself is very serious, and
    we take it very seriously."

    Merabishvili said Saakashvili, who is currently on a visit to
    Brussels, ordered him to personally supervise the investigation.

    Echoing Merabishvili's comments, Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman
    Aleksandr Yakovenko today said the attack was aimed at disrupting the
    ongoing rapprochement between Tbilisi and Moscow. "This criminal act,
    perpetrated in the center of [Tbilisi], fills us with deep
    indignation," he said. "There is no doubt its aim is to undermine the
    development of Russian-Georgian relations. We demand that an
    exhaustive investigation be conducted so that the culprits are
    searched for and sentenced."

    Georgian Interior Minister Giorgi Baramidze, who is currently on a
    working visit to Moscow, today said the investigation has already
    brought "concrete results." Pointing at the situation in Adjaria,
    Baramidze blamed the attacks on "forces eager to destabilize the
    political situation in Georgia." He gave no evidence to back up his
    claims.
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