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Tbilisi: Russian paper sees Georgia-Armenia as friends 'on paper'

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  • Tbilisi: Russian paper sees Georgia-Armenia as friends 'on paper'

    Russian paper sees Georgia-Armenia as friends 'on paper'

    The Messenger, Georgia
    Feb 11 2005

    The Russian newspaper Gazeta SNG reports that the participation of a
    low ranking delegation from Armenia at the funeral of Prime Minister
    Zurab Zhvania demonstrated the relations these two countries have
    with each other.

    For some reason, the paper writes, the first president of Armenia
    Levon Ter-Petrosyan and the ex-speaker of the Armenian assembly Babken
    Ararktsyan were the ones who arrived in Tbilisi for the burial ceremony
    of Zhvania. This friendship, the paper states, "means almost nothing
    for the two 'brothers' - neither for Georgia nor for Armenia." Opposite
    directions in foreign policy will have adverse affect on the relations
    of Tbilisi and Yerevan, the paper concludes. According to the paper,
    Armenian-Georgian relations are facing a difficult time. Armenia does
    not comprehend the open anti-Russian approach of the current Georgian
    leadership, and Tbilisi accuses Yerevan of the opposite. The politics
    led by Zurab Zhvania helped control the reforms of Saakashvili.

    "Now the president is free and can do everything he sees as right.
    The only thing that can stop him, according to the Georgian observers
    is the appointment of the Minister of Defense Irakli Okruashvili
    to the position of the Prime Minister, who is famous for his harsh
    statements. It is still impossible to make Georgia a united state,"
    the paper writes.

    The paper notes that Georgia participates in GUUAM, an international
    body that paper describes as an incapable organization. However,
    the paper states, the presidents of Ukraine and Georgia make every
    effort to "raise this ancestor if integration from the dead."

    The paper writes that Georgia does not share Armenia's opinion, even
    in the Karabakh conflict. However, official Tbilisi is content not to
    make statements regarding "the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan."
    "During the visit to Armenia in 2004, people hinted to the Georgian
    president that it would be better if he would pay attention to the
    settlement of his own conflicts," the paper notes.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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