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Georgia Drags Feet On Issuing Visas To Russian Military - Source

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  • Georgia Drags Feet On Issuing Visas To Russian Military - Source

    GEORGIA DRAGS FEET ON ISSUING VISAS TO RUSSIAN MILITARY - SOURCE

    Interfax News Agency
    Russia & CIS Military Newswire
    August 28, 2006 Monday 1:41 PM MSK

    The Georgian Foreign Ministry has dragged out issuing visas for Russian
    soldiers for more than a month and has finally issued fewer than 100
    visas instead of the required 1,200, a source in the command of the
    Russian military force in Transcaucasia told Interfax-Military News
    Agency on Monday.

    "More than a month ago the command of the Russian military force in
    Transcaucasia asked the Georgian authorities to issue almost 1,200
    visas to Russian soldiers who are coming to Georgia for a rotation.

    However, visas were issued only to 94 soldiers," the source said.

    "This cannot satisfy the command of the Russian military force, and
    it should not probably satisfy the Georgian authorities, if they do
    not plan to drag out the process of Russian military bases withdrawal
    from the country's territory," he noted.

    "The position of the Georgian Foreign and Defense Ministries seems
    strange, because they demand the swiftest possible withdrawal of
    bases, but they create a lot of bureaucratic barriers when resolving
    almost any issue, be it issuing visas or the slightest movement of
    vehicles, demanding coordination over many days and many stages,"
    he said, adding that Russia is fulfilling all its obligations on the
    withdrawal of bases.

    "Six trains with armaments have left the 12th base in Batumi this
    year, and they cargo was added to the inventory of the 102nd Russian
    base in Gyumri, Armenia. We will fulfill the plan of armaments and
    hardware withdrawal from the 62nd base stationed in Akhalkalaki to
    Russia in September," he stressed.

    According to the source, "the stress is laid on the withdrawal of
    heavy hardware in 2006, while various materiel and equipment will
    mostly be relocated in 2007."

    Under a Russian-Georgian accord, the Russian military bases are to
    leave Georgia in 2008.
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