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  • Tbilisi: President: European aid could stand improvement

    President: European aid could stand improvement
    By Mary Makharashvili

    The Messenger, Georgia
    Feb 7 2005

    Thank you for your assistance, but its current form is ineffective, was
    President Mikheil Saakashvili's challenge to Europe while delivering
    the keynote address at the two-day conference on 'South Caucasus in
    the 21st century: Challenges and Opportunities,' held on February
    4-5 at the Marriott Courtyard.

    Although the president's speech on Friday was closed to reporters,
    conference attendees confirmed the president's sentiment, some
    agreeing, others questioning and some clarifying his request for
    Europe to be a more active partner for Georgia.

    Commenting on the president's words, Minister of Foreign Affairs
    Salome Zurabishvili said that the president was neither expressing
    anger nor complaining in his speech. She said that the president
    "simply pointed out some facts" and that it is "necessary that Europe
    transform its projects into more concrete assistance."

    "Yes, earlier there was always readiness and assistance from Europe
    to assist, but they did not target concrete problems," Zurabishvili
    told The Messenger.

    She added that Saakashvili highlighted the example of penal reform.
    Instead of sending numerous experts to analyze the situation, he
    implied Europe would be better off to build prisons.

    The president's words resonated with many attendees. Director of
    the Danish Institute for International Studies Per Carlsen told The
    Messenger, "the president was totally right."

    "The European Union has been very, very slow in recognizing the
    neighborhood of the Caucasus and that it is a part of Europe. It
    has to do much more to play a positive role in the reform process in
    Georgia and, of course, hopefully in Armenia and Azerbaijan as well,"
    Carlsen added.

    President of Project on Transitional Democracies Bruce Jackson,
    however, saw the president's speech as part of his general, vocal
    appeal to the international community for support. In his speech,
    Jackson said, President Saakashvili was challenging Europe to move as
    quickly as the United States has done on things like the Millennium
    Challenge Account.

    "The president admires what the EU has done on the neighborhood
    policy because oftentimes decision making in Brussels is very slow,"
    Jackson said.

    When Saakashvili visits the United States, Jackson said, "he is always
    challenging my government to do more and I think today he was also
    challenging our European allies to do better."

    "One thing about Mikheil Saakashvili is that he is a man in a hurry,"
    Jackson said.

    In an interview with The Messenger, President of the POLICY Foundation
    (Russia) Vyacheslav Nikonov described the European Union as "a very
    bureaucratic institution." He said, "all the assistance programs are
    to spend money inside Europe on feasibility studies, conferences,
    but not on real assistance."

    "That is quite understandable as we in Russia deal with the same kind
    of situation. That is just Europe," he said. "They do not spend much
    money on outside purposes. They like to spend money on themselves."

    Secretary of the Georgian National Security Council Gela Bezhuashvili
    backed up the president's statement, saying Europe lags behind the
    United States in terms of aid to Georgia. "Of course U.S. assistance
    to Georgia is greater than Europe's and it is more oriented to concrete
    results," Bezhuashvili told The Messenger.

    Security in the Caucasus

    More than 140 policymakers, political scientists, researchers and
    high level government officials from 31 countries as well as the
    representatives of different international organizations including
    the EU, NATO and OSCE participated in the conference. The Georgian
    Foundation for Strategic and International Studies (GFSIS) organized
    the event under the support of the Sasakawa Peace Foundation (SPF,
    Japan).

    "We are trying to find out which direction the South Caucasus is
    heading in and what concrete steps need to be taken," Vice-President
    of GFSIS Temur Yakobashvili told The Messenger on Thursday.

    President of GFSIS Alexander Rondeli noted the conference "is of great
    important" because it includes not only Georgia, but the entire South
    Caucasus region.

    "When issues are discussed in the context of the South Caucasus
    and when at the same time representatives of United States, our
    neighboring countries and leading countries of Asia attend it, this
    means that the region is the focus of the interest," Rondeli said in
    an interview with The Messenger.

    One of the main topics of the conference was security in the South
    Caucasus region.

    Asked how secure the Caucasus region is, National Security Council
    Secretary Bezhuashvili said that Georgia is currently analyzing
    security in the Caucasus region.

    "There are quite a lot of dangers in this region but the majority
    of them are in the economic sphere and not in the military one,"
    Bezhuashvili said.

    "There are the issues of human trafficking, drug smuggling, and
    criminal issues. But what is more important is that during this year
    Georgia take steps that set an example for others on how difficult
    situations can be dealt with in a short period of time," he said.

    The absence of the late Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania, who was scheduled
    to speak on Friday, gave attendees even more to worry about. Vice
    President of GFSIS Yakobashvili said the tragic fact "clearly shows
    that our state is quite weak with regard to institution building."

    "The death of such an important figure as Mr. Zurab Zhvania may have
    quite a serious impact not only in Georgia, but also in the region as
    well. I mean that he was a person that was respected not only within
    the country but also by the leaders of many countries and was playing a
    solid and positive role in international relations," Yakobashvili said.

    "The security of state official is always directly connected with
    a country's political security. The main thing is that the change
    of authority does not bring radical changes to the country. For
    this to happen, institutional building of the country is needed,"
    Yakobashvili concluded.
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