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Four ex-Soviet regions seek closer ties with Russia

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  • Four ex-Soviet regions seek closer ties with Russia

    Four ex-Soviet regions seek closer ties with Russia

    Pravda
    18:35 2005-09-14

    Representatives of four ex-Soviet breakaway regions reiterated their
    intention Wednesday to seek international recognition and closer ties
    with Russia, and a Russian lawmaker said it was high time the
    provinces were recognized as sovereign states.

    Officials and academics from Georgia's breakaway provinces of Abkhazia
    and South Ossetia, the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh disputed by
    Azerbaijan and Armenia, and the Trans-Dniester region of Moldova met
    at a conference in Moscow and pledged to pursue independence efforts.

    Igor Akhba, Abkhazia's envoy to Russia, said his region was determined
    to become independent from Georgia and seek closer ties with Russia,
    the AP reports.

    "The people of Abkhazia have voted for an independent republic of
    Abkhazia, ... we are building an independent, lawful state in
    accordance with international law," Akhba said.

    Taimuraz Kokoyev, dean of the South-Ossetian University, said his
    province also had similar aims and hoped one day to become part of
    Russia.

    "The people of South Ossetia have decided their destiny long ago
    ... the Ossetian people will keep seeking to join Russia," Kokoyev
    said.

    Representatives from Nagorno-Karabakh and Trans-Dniester also said
    they relied on Russia's help in their efforts to win international
    recognition.

    All the regions broke away from central governments in separatist wars
    in the early 1990s, cultivating close ties with Russia.

    Konstantin Zatulin, a lawmaker from the Kremlin-backed United Russia
    party, called the sovereignty of these entities a reality that should
    be accepted. "Fighting with reality is as complicated as peeing
    against the wind," Zatulin said.

    Modest Kolerov, a member of the Russian presidential administration
    charged with regional relations, said all the ex-Soviet republics
    needed to ensure freedom of speech, religion and citizenship to their
    citizens.

    "We are acting to provide these fundamental rights to our fellow
    countrymen in the former Soviet republics," the Interfax news agency
    quoted Kolerov as saying.
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