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  • Georgia swaps bases for apartments

    Agency WPS
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    March 28, 2005, Monday

    GEORGIA SWAPS BASES FOR APARTMENTS

    SOURCE: Kommersant, March 24, 2005, p. 10

    by Vladimir Novikov

    Russian-Georgian consultations on the level of foreign ministries
    with regard to withdrawal of Russian military bases from Batumi and
    Akhalkalaki began in Moscow on March 24. The day before Georgia's
    Foreign Minister Salome Zourabichvili stated that incidents similar
    to the incident, which happened on the Georgian-Abkhazian
    administrative border, might frustrate the process of negotiations.

    Mrs. Zourabichvili implied the incident which occurred in the village
    of Ganmukhuri (Georgia) in the zone of Georgian-Abkhazian conflict
    last Tuesday. A large group of the Russian peacekeepers entered the
    village. They surrounded the building in which a unit of the Georgian
    MVD's special forces had settled, and demanded them to surrender
    their weapons. They were given a refusal. UN military mediators
    interfered in the situation. As a result of the talks between Russian
    peacekeepers with Gigi Ugulava, governor of the Samegrelo district,
    the tension was relieved.

    According to Russian peacekeepers, conducting an exercise in their
    responsibility area they accidentally faced a unit of the Georgian
    MVD's special forces and decided to verify the legality of its stay
    there. Georgia's Foreign Minister Vano Merabichvili stressed that
    taking a Spetsnaz into the village of Ganmukhuri at request of the
    local Georgians was a forced measure, because the Abkhazian police
    had held a cleanup there, as a result of which locals were injured.

    This incident may affect the process of talks on the problem, which
    doesn't directly concern the Georgian-Abkhazian conflict. Discussed
    at the consultations are the terms and conditions of withdrawing the
    Russian military bases; responsible for the Russian side is Igor
    Savolsky, an ambassador on special errands, while Deputy Foreign
    Minister of Georgia Merab Antadze is head of the Georgian delegation.

    Tbilisi has taken the following stand: Georgia is ready to accept
    withdrawal of the Russian forces within 4 years (by January 1, 2009),
    with the stipulation that the troops are present "in the withdrawal
    mode" during this entire period, i.e. no exercises are to be held and
    no new military hardware is introduced, against the background of
    personnel cutbacks. Georgia is also ready to present Russian officers
    apartments in downtown Tbilisi, which they would be able to sell with
    profit before their leave to Russia; this is the maximal compensation
    Georgia can offer.

    Besides, Georgia is ready to find $10-15 million (it hopes to get
    this money from international donors) to transport the personnel and
    the military equipment to Russia. Georgia's Foreign Minister Salome
    Zourabichvili thinks the figure of $300-350 million announced by
    Moscow is unreal. However, most important in the position of Moscow
    is not the demand for money, but the circumstance that Russia flatly
    refuses to take the troops "into the withdrawal mode." Even if Moscow
    agrees to the four-year period, the Defense Ministry insists that the
    bases be functioning in the common mode within this period.

    Georgian experts fear that Moscow will procrastinate again and when
    the timeframe elapses it would refer to resistance of locals - as is
    now happening in Transnistria and might occur in Samtskhe-Dzhavakheti
    (of south Georgia where a base is stationed) populated by Armenians.

    Translated by Andrei Ryabochkin

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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