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Georgia FM: Democratic reform in Ukraine will help Russia,

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  • Georgia FM: Democratic reform in Ukraine will help Russia,

    Agence France Presse -- English
    December 10, 2004 Friday 7:15 PM GMT

    AFP Interview: Democratic reform in Ukraine will help Russia, says
    Georgian FM

    MOSCOW

    Georgian Foreign Minister Salome Zurabishvili said on Friday that
    Russia should realise the benefits for itself of a process of
    democratic reform in Ukraine, currently undergoing a period of
    political crisis.

    Speaking to AFP by phone from the Georgian capital Tbilisi,
    Zurabishvili said that in order for the rerun of the second round of
    Ukrainian presidential elections to take place peacefully, Russia
    must be "warned against the temptation to meddle."

    She said in addition that as many observers as possible should be
    deployed in the country for the vote, scheduled to take place on
    December 26.

    "If Ukraine becomes a democratic country at the frontier of Europe
    there can only be winners," including Russia, she said, adding that
    "having borders with stable, democratic countries is something that
    could set (Russia) along the same path."

    "Everything must be done to encourage Russia down this path, one
    which is difficult to take," she said.

    "What is happening in Russia amounts to an internal decolonisation.
    We must encourage them, support them, and help them down this
    difficult path, the only one possible if Russia is to evolve in a way
    that is sufficiently responsible and safe for both itself and its
    neighbours," she added.

    As far as the recent strong criticism levelled by Moscow over the
    West's alleged interference in Ukraine was concerned, and in
    particular comments by Russian President Vladimir Putin, Zurabishvili
    spoke of a "constant swing between signs that Russia is moving
    towards a possible normalisation and and signs that it is slipping
    backwards."

    Questioned about the Russian accusations, Zurabishvili said that
    there had been no intervention.

    "We did not intervene in favour of one candidate of the other. We
    intervened in favour of a democratic process," she said.

    "As long as Russia imagines that support for democracy, whether it is
    in the Caucasus, Ukraine or elsewhere, is something that is directed
    against it, Moscow will fail to understand the way the world is
    going."

    The Georgian foreign minister described Moscow's manifestation of
    discontent as "a return to the instincts of the Soviet Union."

    "The big difference is that it does not have any effect any more.
    Russian short fuses, which in the past petrified the West, are today
    received in a more measured, philosophical way... and do not achieve
    the desired effect."

    Zurabishvili also called on Russia to keep out of Georgia's quarrels
    with the separatist republic of Abkhazia, saying that Moscow must
    "understand that former Soviet republics had become independent
    countries" and that Moscow could not interfere directly in their
    affairs.

    Abkhazia has de facto independence from Georgia since it defeated
    Georgian troops with the help of Russian mercenaries in the early
    1990s in the aftermath of the breakup of the Soviet Union.

    On the recent decision by Azerbaijan to shut down its cargo rail
    traffic to other Caucasus republics because it feared that some of
    the goods were being delivered via Georgia to its arch-foe Armenia,
    Zurabishvili said Georgia had good relations with both countries.

    She said Tbilisi had agreed to prevent transit through its territory
    of military goods. But she added: "We refuse to take any economic
    sanctions against Armenia."

    She said that if Georgia was anything other than neutral in the
    dispute between the two countries, "we would enter into a logic of
    escalation which would be not only damaging for us and for our
    neighbours, but for the whole region."
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