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Armenia welcomes end of standoff between Tbilisi and Ajaria

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  • Armenia welcomes end of standoff between Tbilisi and Ajaria

    ArmenPress
    May 6 2004

    ARMENIA WELCOMES END OF STANDOFF BETWEEN TBILISI AND AJARIA

    YEREVAN, MAY 6, ARMENPRESS: Armenia welcomed today the end of the
    standoff between the central authorities in neighboring Georgia and
    its autonomous region of Ajaria. Hamlet Gasparian, a spokesman for
    Armenian foreign ministry, told Armenpress that "Armenia is satisfied
    that the confrontation between the central authorities of Georgia and
    Ajaria ended without bloodshed and mainly peacefully."
    Gasparian said the end of the conflict is very important for
    Georgia and therefore, for the entire South Caucasus on the way of
    establishing stability and peace in the region. "Armenia welcomes the
    consistent and decisive policy of the Georgian authorities that has
    helped to overcome that serious obstacle," Gasparian said.
    Georgia's standoff with Ajaria ended as Aslan Abashidze, the
    leader of the defiant region, resigned Wednesday night and left the
    country for Moscow. "Aslan has run away, Ajaria is free,"' Georgian
    president Mikhail Saakashvili said in a broadcast early today from
    the capital Tbilisi. "A new era has begun in Georgia's history," he
    said. Before flying to Moscow Abashidze ordered his paramilitary
    forces to lay down their arms.
    Saakashvili later arrived in Ajaria's capital, Batumi, where he
    was greeted by crowds of supporters. Saakashvili who had given
    Abashidze until May 12 to disarm local militias or have his
    government dissolved, imposed direct presidential rule only hours
    before Abashidze left. The end of the standoff was also welcomed by
    the US State Department.
    Abashidze had run Ajaria independently from the central government
    in Tbilisi since the early 1990s.
    "Georgian government will not persecute former supporters of Aslan
    Abashidze. We have come here for love and not to separate the
    nation," Georgian prime minister Zurab Zhvania said in a televised
    address.
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