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Senior politician hails Russia role in avoiding bloodshed in Ajaria

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  • Senior politician hails Russia role in avoiding bloodshed in Ajaria

    Senior politician hails Russia's role in avoiding bloodshed in Ajaria

    Radio Mayak, Moscow
    6 May 04


    Presenter Russian Federation Council speaker Sergey Mironov emphasized
    in an interview with our radio station that Moscow had always
    supported Georgia's territorial integrity.

    Mironov The political changes in Ajaria are an internal affair for
    Georgia. Russia has always spoken out consistently, as a matter of
    principle, in support of Georgia's territorial integrity. I have to
    say, with satisfaction, that it is in a large part thanks to Russia's
    efforts that bloodshed was avoided in Ajaria and that former Ajarian
    leader Aslan Abashidze's resignation took place peacefully. Talking
    about Abashidze's future, I think that it is now a personal matter for
    him.

    Most importantly, a powerful positive impulse has appeared in our
    relations with Georgia. I hope that Georgia and our diplomats make
    effective use of this impulse. Nevertheless, it is important to state
    that the way in which Abashidze's resignation happened in Ajaria is
    not acceptable either in Abkhazia or in South Ossetia. All in all, I
    have to say that the standoff between Georgia and Ajaria ended well
    because there were no casualties. Now, against the background of these
    events, with the Georgian foreign minister Salome Zourabichvili
    visiting Russia, there is an opportunity to move forward in many
    aspects of our agreements. I would like to repeat that the Federation
    Council regards what has happened as a positive event.

    Presenter Meanwhile, political experts do not rule out the possibility
    of changes to Ajaria's status as an autonomous region within
    Georgia. Konstantin Zatulin, the director of the Institute of CIS
    Countries, had this to say on the matter.

    Zatulin Now, a major blow has been dealt to the self-government that
    Ajaria enjoyed during the entire period of Abashidze's rule. In the
    immediate future all questions relating to the region's development
    will be resolved in the Georgian capital Tbilisi.

    I think that the only rational step for Georgian President Mikheil
    Saakashvili to take is to preserve Ajaria's autonomy and so to avoid
    any reproaches from the guarantor countries of the Moscow and Kars
    treaties of 1921 - these were Soviet Russia and Turkey. In signing
    these treaties, they guaranteed the existence of an autonomous
    Ajaria. It was only for these reasons and under these conditions that
    Turkey agreed to pull its troops out of Batumi, to be replaced by
    Soviet troops.

    Formally, Ajaria will remain autonomous, but it will have no real
    autonomy from Tbilisi. I don't know what this will lead to in the long
    term, but one thing is clear: even now it could bring about an
    explosion of enthusiasm and attempts to suppress all national
    differences in other Georgian regions. This will not just be in
    Abkhazia and South Ossetia, over which Tbilisi has lost all control,
    but, for example, in Samtskhe-Javakheti Region, which is located next
    to Ajaria and has a predominately Armenian population.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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