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Georgian parliament set to debate future of Russian bases

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  • Georgian parliament set to debate future of Russian bases

    Georgian parliament set to debate future of Russian bases
    By MISHA DZHINDZHIKHASHVILI

    AP Worldstream
    Mar 09, 2005

    Georgia's parliamentary speaker on Wednesday urged lawmakers to
    postpone discussing an ultimatum threatening to blockade Russia's two
    remaining military bases in the country, but legislators insisted on
    debating the politically explosive issue.

    The Soviet-era bases at Batumi and Akhalkalaki are the focus of
    increasing tension between Western-leaning Georgia and its neighbor.
    Russia has said it could take as much as a dozen years to close down
    the bases, which Georgia says is unacceptable.

    Speaker Nino Burdzhanadze said Russia had agreed to examine the issue
    by May 1.

    "We need to wait for results and then make a decision," Burdzhanadze
    said, calling on the legislature to return the draft legislation
    proposing the blockade to the defense committee.

    President Mikhail Saakashvili told reporters Tuesday that his
    government's position was unchanged: "The Russian bases must be
    withdrawn from Georgia."

    But like Burdzhanadze, he expressed hope that Georgia and Russia
    could reach an agreement within six weeks.

    "In spite of the fact that my hopes have not been justified in the
    past, maybe this time we will achieve progress in the negotiations
    with Russia," he said. "No one has the right to have their military
    bases on our territory."

    The proposed legislation under discussion calls for Russia to set a
    "reasonable period" for closing the bases by May 1.

    Parliamentary defense committee chairman Givi Targamadze said that
    if no agreement is reached, authorities should plan "to prevent any
    movement on Georgian territory by Russian servicemen except for that
    which is connected to withdrawal from the territory of our country."

    In spite of Georgian leaders' strong stand on the bases, they are
    worried about possible unrest among the population, especially the
    Armenian-minority residents in the city of Akhalkalaki. Many of them
    work at the Russian base and have sharply protested its possible
    closure, which would lead to massive unemployment _ already a chronic
    problem elsewhere in impoverished Georgia.
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