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  • Tbilisi & Baku quarrel over cargos

    TBILISI AND BAKU QUARREL OVER CARGOS

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting
    Dec 8 2004

    Georgian businessmen hit by a row over whether freight cars from
    Azerbaijan are destined for Armenia

    By Lela Iremashvili in Tbilisi and Rufat Abbasov in Baku

    The Azerbaijani authorities have detained more than 900 freight
    railcars travelling to Georgia in the past month, following suspicions
    that they were actually en route to Baku's long-standing enemy,
    Armenia.

    The row has not only cost Georgian businesses millions of US
    dollars but has also damaged the traditionally good relations
    between Baku and Tbilisi, which were recently cemented further by
    the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline.

    Most of the freight containers, containing diesel oil, flour, liquefied
    gas, grain and other items, had travelled by sea from Central Asia to
    Baku, where they continued by rail. Many were heading for Georgia's
    Black Sea ports of Batumi and Poti and onwards to European markets.

    While some of the freight cars were allowed to cross the frontier
    last week, a significant number are still stuck at the Beyuk-Kasik
    border crossing. Last month, only cargoes originating in Azerbaijan
    were allowed to cross, without any explanation from Baku why the
    others should be stopped.

    However, Azerbaijani ambassador Ramiz Hasanov was invited to the
    Georgian foreign ministry to discuss the issue, he told the media that
    Baku suspected that freight was passing through Georgia to Armenia,
    in contravention of an agreement his government signed with Tbilisi
    in June forbidding the transit of goods to a third country "contrary
    to their national interests".

    "Azerbaijan has its own national interests in connection with this
    issue," Hasanov said, referring to its bitter dispute with Armenia over
    Nagorny Karabakh. "How would [Georgia] react if Azerbaijan delivered
    fuel or other cargo to [the disputed territories] Abkhazia and South
    Ossetia? That would damage the national interests of Georgia."

    Azerbaijani prime minister Artur Rasizade told IWPR that he had
    evidence that several freight carriages transporting oil products
    were indeed intended for Armenia.

    Georgian prime minister Zurab Zhvania has tried to play down the
    incident, telling journalists that he saw no reason to "dramatise"
    the situation. "We are working with the Azerbaijani side and I am
    sure that we won't have any problems," he said.

    In an attempt to resolve the situation, Georgian Railways' commercial
    director Ramiz Giorgadze travelled to Baku, while officials from the
    Azerbaijani customs committee visited Tbilisi and checked the freight
    cars' documentation. Those that were given the all clear by customs
    officials were immediately allowed to cross into Georgia.

    Georgian officials said that none of the detained freight cars were
    travelling to Armenia, although David Onoprishvili, chairman of
    Georgian Railways, conceded that this had happened before.

    The Georgian customs department told IWPR that the issue had only
    become relevant after the inter-governmental agreement signed by the
    two nations came into force on November 22.

    Customs officials have said that Georgia would no longer re-export
    cargos to Armenia, in line with Azerbaijani requests.

    However, Georgia's deputy minister of economic development Geno
    Muradian argued that there was no legal basis for stopping most of
    the cars, even if they did proceed to Armenia.

    "Wheat and oil are not military cargos, and cannot threaten the
    security of a country. If they end up in Armenia, it won't be a
    tragedy," he said.

    "For a long time transit, cargos from Azerbaijan have not officially
    been going to Armenia," Muradian went on. "But business has its own
    laws, and a businessman who receives goods in Georgia will find ways
    to send them on to Armenia if he wants to."

    Officials in both countries are now debating what harm the row has
    done to relations.

    Georgian economic expert Giorgi Khukhasvili said, "Azerbaijan is our
    strategic partner, our countries are fully integrated with regard to
    transit shipments, and without Azerbaijan, Georgia's transit functions
    are worth nothing."

    However, Baku political analyst Rasmi Agayev argued in an article in
    the Obozrevatel newspaper that the two nations' strategic partnership
    "is no more than a declaration", and criticised Tbilisi for its "double
    standards" in not supporting Azerbaijan over the Karabakh dispute.

    Georgian businesses are being tight-lipped about what the dispute
    has cost them, although losses are believed to run into millions
    of dollars.

    Vano Mtvraralashvili, head of the Union of Producers, Importers and
    Consumers of Oil Products, said many Georgian importers whose products
    had been delayed on the border for a month had asked him for help.

    For example, said Mtvraralashvili, one firm was trying to import 1,200
    tonnes of diesel oil from Turkmenistan, where prices were cheaper.
    Despite having all the documentation to prove that the oil was intended
    for Georgia's domestic market, it was not being allowed through.

    "If the Azerbaijanis had doubts about Georgian companies, then why
    didn't they stop the cargoes on the Turkmen-Azerbaijani border?"
    complained Mtvraralashvili. "Now they've paid Baku fees for a transit
    that they can't complete."

    In any case, he said, Armenia would not be bereft of petroleum products
    because it also used other transit routes.

    Both governments now say they are confident that full freight traffic
    will be restored in the next few days. But the deeper implications
    of this row may have a much more lasting effect.

    Lela Iremashvili is a correspondent with Black Sea Press news agency
    in Tbilisi. Rufat Abbasov is a correspondent with Reuters in Baku.
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