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Georgia Leader Cancels Moscow Trip Amid Troop Dispute

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  • Georgia Leader Cancels Moscow Trip Amid Troop Dispute

    Georgia Leader Cancels Moscow Trip Amid Troop Dispute (Update2)

    Bloomberg
    July 21 2006

    July 21 (Bloomberg) -- Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili
    canceled a trip to today's Moscow summit of former Soviet states
    as increasing tension over the presence of Russian peacekeepers in
    his country threatens to derail Russia's attempts to join the World
    Trade Organization.

    "He's not coming," because he and Russian President Vladimir Putin were
    unable to find time to meet privately at the summit, Georgian Foreign
    Ministry spokeswoman Nino Kajaia said in a phone interview. Saakashvili
    was busy planning changes to his Cabinet's lineup, after dismissing
    his ministers today to allow new appointments to take place on July
    24, Kajaia said. Both governments said talks may be rescheduled.

    Russian-Georgian relations, tense since Saakashvili came to power after
    the 2003 "Rose Revolution" vowing to join the European Union and NATO,
    worsened this year as Russia banned Georgian wine and mineral water
    imports, citing health grounds. Georgia said July 14 it may review
    a trade accord with Russia, a step that could wreck Russia's push to
    join the WTO.

    Putin's government estimates WTO admission, on which talks have lasted
    for more than a decade, would add $10 billion a year to its economy
    by aiding exporters. The country's decade-long bid to join the WTO
    stalled last week over its barriers to U.S. meat exports. The U.S. is
    the only one of the WTO's 149 members yet to approve an accord that
    would let Russia join the group.

    Russia must sign individual treaties with every WTO member before
    being admitted to the organization.

    Ukraine President Cancels

    Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko, a Saakashvili ally, also
    decided not to attend the two-day summit of leaders from the 12-member
    Commonwealth of Independent States, citing the "political situation"
    in his own country, according to Yushchenko's Web site.

    A political standoff has left Ukraine without a government since
    parliamentary elections in March.

    Armenian President Robert Kocharian also canceled his trip to the
    summit because he has a bronchial infection, Interfax said, citing
    his press office. Armenia's Foreign Ministry had no comment on the
    report when contacted by phone.

    Russia's Vedomosti newspaper today said Turkmenistan's President
    Saparmurat Niyazov, who has missed some previous CIS summits, will
    skip the meeting. The CIS includes all of the former Soviet states,
    except for the three Baltic republics.

    Turkmenistan is in a dispute with Russia over natural gas prices.

    Georgian Demands

    In a July 18 resolution, Georgian lawmakers called for an international
    force to replace Russian troops in Abkhazia and South Ossetia. The
    regions, with pro-Russian leaderships, broke away from Georgia when
    the country became independent after the Soviet Union was dissolved in
    1991 and have been outside Georgian control since a civil war. Russia's
    government this week said the vote was a Georgian attempt to provoke
    conflict.

    Georgia will reopen bilateral trade talks with Russia and demands
    Putin's government deal with its concerns about Russia's policies,
    Interfax reported, citing Georgian Deputy Economy Minister Tamara
    Kovziridze in Tbilisi. Russia must close allegedly illegal checkpoints
    in Abkhazia and South Ossetia, ship taxable goods only through the
    legal Kazbegi-Verkhny Lars checkpoint and protect Georgian goods and
    intellectual property, Interfax cited Kovziridze as saying.

    Saakashvili has the support of the U.S., which has been critical of
    Russia's record on democracy and human rights. Russian energy supplies
    to Georgia were cut this year in incidents that Putin's government
    said were accidents or terrorist acts. Saakashvili accused Russia
    of sabotage.

    `Full Timetable'

    The informal summit at the Presidents' Cup horserace at the Moscow
    Hippodrome has a full timetable that "does not allow the possibility
    of separate, detailed bilateral conversations," Russia's Foreign
    Ministry said in a statement. Saakashvili and Putin last met in the
    Russian president's hometown of St. Petersburg on July 13.

    The EU said in a statement today that it's "deeply concerned" about
    continuing tension between Georgia and Russia.

    Moscow Mayor Yuri Luzhkov, a Putin supporter, visited Abkhazia
    yesterday, with the Georgian Foreign Ministry describing his trip as
    "a provocation and yet another demonstration of disrespect for the
    universally recognized norms and principles of international law." It
    said the trip showed Russian policy is aimed at "actual annexation
    of Georgian territory."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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