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  • Georgian lawmakers say Russian double standards in Caucasus helpedca

    Georgian lawmakers say Russian double standards in Caucasus helped cause Beslan tragedy
    ED JOHNSON

    AP Worldstream
    Sep 17, 2004

    Senior Georgian lawmakers said Thursday that Russia's failure to
    bring stability to the Caucasus, and the Kremlin's "double standards"
    in dealing with separatists there, had contributed to the Beslan
    school massacre.

    Nino Burdzhanadze, Georgia's parliament speaker, said the man blamed
    for the bloody school siege, Chechen rebel warlord Shamil Basayev,
    enjoyed Kremlin support more than a decade ago when he fought Georgian
    troops in the breakaway province of Abkhazia.

    "What happened in Beslan unfortunately is a reason of double standards
    which Russia used every time," she told journalists during a visit to
    London. "You should punish killers and terrorists just immediately. If
    you use terrorists, if you use persons like Basayev, one day he will
    turn his guns against you ... What happened in Beslan was the fault
    of Russia, it is absolutely clear," she added, speaking English.

    The school hostage taking, which resulted in more than 330 deaths,
    "demonstrated that Russia's policy to northern Caucasus needs very
    fundamental changes and amendments," said lawmaker David Bakradze. He
    urged European countries and the United States to become more active
    in the region.

    The Caucasus refers to the portion of southern Russia that includes
    Chechnya and North Ossetia, where the school attack took place,
    as well as the former Soviet republics of Georgia, Armenia and
    Azerbaijan. South Ossetia is part of Georgia, while North Ossetia is
    a Russian region just across the border.

    The lawmakers, who met with British Foreign Office Minister Bill
    Rammell, said they were very concerned by Moscow's threats to strike
    at terrorist bases outside Russia's borders. Russia has repeatedly
    complained that Chechen insurgents use Georgia's rugged Pankisi Gorge
    to hide and regroup.

    "We are very troubled with those statements," said Bakradze. "We are
    afraid very much that this very idea of fighting against terror could
    be used for slightly different purposes by Russian military ... This
    unpredictability of Russia and absence of democracy in Russia worries
    us very much because militaries can make almost any decision that
    they want and nobody will be punished."

    Russia and Georgia have had a tense relationship since the breakup
    of the Soviet Union, and Georgia has moved to boost its ties with
    the European Union and the United States to offset the influence of
    its giant neighbor.

    Tensions have flared over the fate of Georgia's separatist regions of
    Abkhazia and South Ossetia, which have enjoyed de facto independence
    since breaking away in armed conflicts in the early 1990s. Both have
    strong ties to Russia, which Georgia has accused of interference as
    Tbilisi seeks to return them to the fold.

    The lawmakers repeated President Mikhail Saakashvili's calls for an
    international conference to ease tension in South Ossetia. Russia
    wields powerful influence in South Ossetia, where most residents have
    been given Russian passports and many want the region to become part
    of Russia.

    They said Western support was essential to efforts to unite their
    fractured country and said European allies could play an important
    role in convincing Moscow that a stronger Georgia was not a threat
    to Russia.

    "We want cooperation with Russia. We have a huge common interest
    which is stability in the Caucasus. Russia still acts with a Cold
    War mentality in the Caucasus," said Bakradze, who is chairman of the
    parliament's committee on European integration. He pointed to Moscow's
    unhappiness when the United States deployed between 80 to 100 military
    trainers to Georgia to help it cope with fighters in Pankisi Gorge.

    "If Georgia is strong we can guarantee security of the southern flank
    of Russia," Bakradze added.

    The lawmakers said they wanted Georgia to become an associate member
    of the European Union within three years.
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