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No separatism behind Adzhar crisis: Georgia's FM says

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  • No separatism behind Adzhar crisis: Georgia's FM says

    RIA Novosti, Russia
    May 6 2004

    NO SEPARATISM BEHIND ADZHAR CRISIS: GEORGIA'S FOREIGN MINISTER


    MOSCOW, May 6 (RIA Novosti) - There was no separatist undercurrent to
    the Adzhar crisis-it was a clash between democratic and
    non-democratic forces, said Salome Zurabishvili, Georgia's Foreign
    Minister, as she was commenting stormy developments in the autonomy
    to a Moscow news conference.

    "Democracy has won with democratic methods," she summed up the
    situation.

    Updated Georgia is recurring to peaceful democratic means to settle
    its problems. The rulers of Abkhazia and South
    Ossetia-self-proclaimed republics in Georgia - may find that of major
    interest, she assumes.

    Georgia is willing to re-appraise the Abkhaz situation with
    settlement prospects, added the minister.

    "Georgia's new leaders are self-reliant. That does not mean that they
    are aggressive. We are taking a more pragmatic view of things than
    before," she reassured.

    Miss Zurabishvili thanked Georgia's partners in Europe and the USA
    for promoting Adzhar settlement: "They helped us to get a dialogue
    going. When the dialogue exhausted its opportunities, and the
    situation demanded democratic progress, our partners offered us
    support." A reporter asked her what was to become of Aslan Abashidze,
    recent Adzhar president. He will not be harassed and persecuted,
    reassured the minister. Same about his family. Georgia's President
    Mikhail Saakashvili has pledged it.

    "Russia has shifted the burden on its own shoulders. Thank you," said
    Salome Zurabishvili.

    "Georgia has not entitled us to chase him," Sergei Lavrov, Russia's
    Foreign Minister, retorted to that.

    Reconciliation is the core of current Georgian policies. It concerns
    all-whether they cherish the memory of President Zurab Gamsakhurdia
    or side with ex-President Aslan Abashidze, stressed Salome
    Zurabishvili.

    She highly appreciated Igor Ivanov's visit to Batumi, Adzhar capital,
    as extremely important and endowed with a symbolism. Igor Ivanov,
    preceding Foreign Minister, is now Russia's federal Security Council
    Secretary.

    "The Adzhar situation would have been settled in whatever case-the
    people determined that it would be so. But Mr. Ivanov arrived in an
    important symbolical move. Russia was proffering us a helping hand at
    the last instant. Mutual confidence is being established, which is
    necessary for our relations to take the right road. Now, we no longer
    have any difficulties trying to understand each other." Lengthy local
    conflicts are spoking the wheels of Caucasian progress, the minister
    went on.

    "What we refer to as 'frozen conflicts' are actually freezing our
    development-I mean Georgia, Abkhazia and the entire region. We must
    realise the point, and Georgia has realised it." The same pertains to
    Karabakh, over which another two Transcaucasian countries-Armenia and
    Azerbaijan-have been clashing for many years now.

    The whole world is making progress. Whether the Caucasian nations are
    to join it depends on the settlement of those and similar conflicts.

    The Commonwealth of Independent States is among Georgia's foreign
    political priorities.

    "The CIS is prominent in Georgian policies, with an emphasis on
    Armenia, Ukraine and the post-Soviet Central Asia." Georgia greatly
    values its partnership with CIS countries, and will carry it on,
    reassured the minister.

    Her country is determined to combine its partnership with NATO with
    Russo-Georgian cooperation. Georgia's road to Europe, and to
    partnership with NATO, does not rule out close neighbourly contacts
    with Russia-the two trends can go together.

    "The time of a choice from among the principal players is past. There
    was a time when Georgia was gambling on antagonisms. It gained
    nothing," Salome Zurabishvili emphatically remarked.
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