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  • MOSCOW: Georgian foreign minister says bases deal does not needparli

    Georgian foreign minister says bases deal does not need parliamentary approval

    Interfax news agency, Moscow
    30 May 05

    Georgian Foreign Minister Salome Zourabichvili has told a news
    conference in Moscow that the Russian base agreements do not need to
    be endorsed by the Georgian parliament. She thought that about a third
    of the current 2,900-strong personnel at the bases would remain in
    Georgia and added that they would be allowed to own the flats where
    they live free of charge. She also noted that Georgia did not want
    to host any foreign military bases on its territory and did not want
    to see Russian troops currently stationed in Georgia to be moved to
    elsewhere in the Caucasus. The following is an excerpt from a report
    by Russian news agency Interfax

    Moscow, 30 May: Agreements on the pullout of Russian military bases
    from Georgia do not need the endorsement of the Georgian parliament,
    Georgian Foreign Minister Salome Zourabichvili told a news conference
    in Moscow on 30 May.

    Zourabichvili said that a joint Russian-Georgian statement signed in
    Moscow "was a political one and there is no need for its ratification
    by the Georgian parliament, but a special technical agreement will
    be concluded for Russia which will be then submitted for ratification
    by the Russian State Duma".

    Zourabichvili said that from the time of the signing of these
    agreements the Russian military bases have received the status of
    being in pullout mode from Georgia.

    [Passage omitted]

    Zourabichvili said that according to an assessment by the Georgian
    side, nearly one third of the personnel of the Russian military bases
    will remain in Georgia. They will receive free of charge the flats,
    where they currently live, as private property. She said that a total
    of about 2,900 people serve at Russian military bases in Georgia.

    Asked whether Georgia is planning to deploy military bases from other
    countries on its territory, the minister said that "instructors and
    military personnel from other countries, including Russia, will be
    present in Georgia at a joint antiterrorist centre, but military
    bases are another issue".

    "We have repeatedly said that Georgia does not wish to have any
    military bases from foreign states on its territory...[ellipsis as
    published], you have to trust us that we are not planning to deploy
    other military bases," she said.

    Zourabichvili said that Georgia did not welcome any reinforcement
    of foreign military bases on the territory of the Transcaucasus. "We
    cannot allow or ban the pullout of part of these bases [in Georgia]
    to Russia's other military bases, for example, those in Armenia. But
    we have made every possible effort to ensure that the main part of the
    Russian military bases are withdrawn to Russia," Zourabichvili said.

    She said that "we have no desire for foreign military bases to be
    present in Georgia, and neither do we want the military bases of
    other states to be reinforced elsewhere in the Caucasus".
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