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  • Georgia urges EU to boost Caucasus security role

    Georgia urges EU to boost Caucasus security role
    By Sebastian Alison

    Reuters
    Sept 14 2004

    BRUSSELS, Sept 14 (Reuters) - Georgia urged the European Union on
    Tuesday to engage Russia on border security in the volatile South
    Caucasus to bring peace to a region that both Moscow and Brussels
    regard as part of their "backyard".

    Chronic instability of the Caucasus was dramatised by the school
    siege in Beslan, in the Russian region of North Ossetia, when more
    than 300 people, half of them children, died in a chaotic end to
    a hostage-taking by Chechen gunmen. Now that the South Caucasus
    states of Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan have joined the EU's
    "new neighbourhood" programme to boost ties with countries around
    the expanding bloc, the EU should hold direct talks with Moscow on
    border security, Georgian Foreign Minister Salome Zurabishvili said.

    "I've been pleading here for the EU to raise this question with
    Russia," she told reporters.

    "We think that with the South Caucasus being now in the new
    neighbourhood initiative and being also in the "near abroad" of
    Russia, there is an item for cooperation between the EU and Russia
    to deal with terrorism through more exchange of information, through
    border management."

    Russia has traditionally regarded the South Caucasus as part of
    its sphere of influence and spurned outside help, but the region is
    increasingly seeking closer ties with Brussels. Georgia has moved
    furthest in aligning itself with the EU.

    It elected pro-western President Mikhail Saakashvili in January after
    veteran leader Eduard Shevardnadze was overthrown.

    Saakashvili, 36, a Western-educated lawyer, emphasised his European
    credentials by appointing Zurabishvili, a French national then serving
    as French ambassador to Tbilisi, as his foreign minister in March.

    GEORGIA NOW IN EU BACKYARD

    The EU has stepped up its own interest in Georgia since Saakashvili's
    election, but stresses the need to continue engagement with Moscow.

    "It's an important part of our backyard, where we can only achieve
    our own objectives if we're working closely with Russia," said Emma
    Udwin, spokeswoman for EU External Relations Commissioner Chris Patten.

    "It is clear that there's been a sea-change in the attention given
    to this region," she added.

    Zurabishvili said the security situation had not worsened since the
    Beslan siege, "but it only confirms what we had been saying before,
    that it's very dangerous in this region to generate instability".

    She added she was extremely concerned by the lack of control on the
    border between the breakaway Georgian region of South Ossetia, and
    Russia's North Ossetia, and she wanted the EU to press Russia for
    closer coperation on that area.

    Zurabishvili cautioned against attempts by Moscow to bring stability
    to the region unilaterally, citing violations of Georgian airspace
    by Russia on Tuesday as unacceptable.

    She also rejected threats by Russia's top general, Yuri Baluyevsky,
    to attack "terrorist bases" anywhere in the world -- remarks widely
    interpreted as referring especially to Georgia.

    "We don't think this is the proper approach to deal with this question,
    especially as we have shown our readiness to cooperate," she said of
    Baluyevsky's remarks.

    Azerbaijan's Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov, in Brussels for
    separate talks with the EU, agreed that the bloc had a role in
    fighting terrorism and bringing stability to the South Caucasus,
    saying his talks had stressed the benefits of closer economic and
    political cooperation.
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