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Tbilisi: In Moscow, JCC renews demilitarization talks

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  • Tbilisi: In Moscow, JCC renews demilitarization talks

    The Messenger, Georgia
    March 17 2005

    In Moscow, JCC renews demilitarization talks
    Tskhinvali launches new attacks against OSCE presence
    By Christina Tashkevich


    State Minister on Conflict Negotiation Goga Khaindrava
    Demilitarization of the Georgian-Ossetian border is one of the issued
    set to be discussed at the meeting of the co-heads of the Joint
    Control Commission (JCC) on March 16-17.

    The meeting that opens in Wednesday in Moscow is the first meeting in
    two months and comes after what officials say has been a "pause" in
    the demilitarization process.

    According to the South Ossetian representative to the JCC, Boris
    Chochiev, in Moscow the sides will discuss "issues in the frame of
    JCC negotiations and the meeting of the president of the
    self-proclaimed South Ossetia Eduard Kokoiti and the late Georgian
    Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania in Sochi last November."

    The Russian media quoted the State Minister on Conflict Negotiation
    Goga Khaindrava who commented on the latest statements of the
    President of Abkhazia Sergey Bagapsh. Khaindrava did not exclude that
    he will meet with Bagapsh in Moscow.

    Commenting on Bagapsh's statement that the summit of four
    unrecognized republics - Abkhazia, South Ossetia, Nagorno-Karabakh
    (Azerbaijan) and Transdnestre (Moldova) - will be conveyed in the
    near future, Khaindrava rejected it as "a creation of the separatist
    movement."

    "I'm very offended that such politics continue and I think it would
    not bring anything good for Russia as well," said Khaindrava. He
    added this issue would not be discussed during the JCC meeting.

    In the meantime, the Committee on Information of South Ossetia blames
    Georgian side in ignoring all decisions taken by the JCC. The South
    Ossetian office has also increased its attacks on OSCE in the region
    saying it does not contribute to the conflict settlement.

    "The Tskhinvali office of the OSCE is a spy network in Georgia,
    working against South Ossetia," reads the Committee's statement.

    Last week Chochiev, who is also South Ossetia's minister for
    emergency situations, called for the head of the OSCE office in
    Tskhinvali, Gancho Ganchev, to be withdrawn but noted at the time it
    was not a move against the OSCE in general.

    The head of the Russian side of the Commission Valery Kenyaikin told
    Interfax on March 15 that the meeting of Kokoiti and the Georgian
    Prime Minister Zurab Noghaideli may continue the process of
    fulfillment of agreements.

    "But this will only make sense if the promises to follow a peaceful
    way of conflict negotiation will be kept and if force is not used,"
    he added.

    Visiting Moscow on March 15, Abkhaz de facto president Sergei
    Baghapsh announced that the leaders of the breakaway regions
    Abkhazia, South Ossetia, Transdnestre (Moldova) and Nagorno-Karabakh
    (Azerbaijan) plan to hold a summit to coordinate their policies in
    the near future.

    Speaking at a press conference in the office of the Russian news
    agency Interfax, Bagapsh told journalists that a date and place for
    the joint meeting would be agreed on in the near future.

    "Tomorrow, or the day after tomorrow, we will decide when to hold
    this meeting. It may be held in Moscow, or somewhere in the North
    Caucasus," Baghapsh said, adding that a meeting was necessary at the
    present time particularly because of the current situation in South
    Ossetia and Transdnestre.
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