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Heroes Of The Visa War

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  • Heroes Of The Visa War

    HEROES OF THE VISA WAR
    Olga Allenova

    Kommersant, Russia
    Oct 18 2006

    Crowds Meet Deported Georgians in Tbilisi

    A Russian Emergencies Ministry plane arrived in Tbilisi yesterday
    carrying 150 Georgian citizens who were being deported from Russia.

    They were given a hero's welcome. That flight, which was supposed to
    have brought to Tbilisi a Georgian citizen named Tengiz Togonidze who
    died in Moscow on the way to the airport, delivered a crushing blow
    to the remnants of Russia's authority in the region. Kommersant's
    special correspondent Olga Allenova has the details.

    That day, the Tbilisi airport was particularly crowded: besides
    the usual crowds accompanying and meeting travelers, there were also
    journalists and representatives of the Russian embassy and the Georgian
    authorities. Even several additional fast food restaurants had opened
    in the departure hall. The Emergencies Ministry (MChS) flight, which
    was expected at 16:00, was delayed until 18:00: a Georgian citizen
    named Tengiz Togonidze, who was supposed to be on the flight, died on
    Moscow on the road to Domodedovo airport. As soon as the news reached
    Georgia, it was clear that a turning point had been reached in the
    cold war between Moscow and Tbilisi. The two sides will have to come
    to an agreement now or never. Judging by the scene in the airport,
    those in Georgia have cast their vote in favor of the latter.

    The approximately one hundred Russian citizens who were preparing
    to leave Georgia on the same MChS plane were reluctant to speak with
    journalists. Only one woman responded, when asked why she was leaving,
    "since it's possible, I'm going." Airport workers said that those who
    are leaving are mainly Armenians and some Georgians who have succeeded
    in obtaining Russian citizenship. "Why are they leaving?" parroted a
    security services official at the airport, his voice heavy with irony
    - "because it's free!" A little while later, the same man explained
    with dignity to journalists that President Saakashvili has forbidden
    cargo planes from the Russian MChS to fly into Georgia so that Russia
    has been forced to send an Il-62 passenger plane instead of stuffing
    people into cargo planes like cattle. Valery Vasiliev, the Russian
    consul in Georgia, told me that this will probably be the last plane
    that will take Russian citizens out of Georgia: all of those who wanted
    to leave Georgia, around 500 people, have already left. In reply to
    the question of how it came about that a person being deported by
    Russia died on the road to the airport, the consul answered, "it is
    a very sad event, there will be an investigation," but said nothing
    more concrete. That was provided by Georgian ombudsman Sozar Subari:
    "It is run-of-the-mill fascism," he said. "It's Nazism. I approached
    the Russian ombudsman with a request that he intervene in this outrage,
    if in Russian some kind of positive forces still exist. Out of the
    150 people deported today, more than half have normal documents and
    the right to live in Russia!"

    When the people from the MChS plane cleared passport control and
    began to trickle into the arrival hall, they were surrounded by a
    wall of journalists so solid that it was difficult to push through
    it. Those who arrived did not want to comment. Someone shielded his
    face with his hands, and another covered his head with his coat as he
    pushed through the throng. The men, frowning, haphazardly attired and
    with unshaven cheeks, were irritated and embittered, and the women
    were distraught. One of them, who was carrying a child in her arms,
    stopped as a microphone was thrust at her. "Why did they arrest you?"

    she was asked. "My visa was not in order," said the woman. "What will
    you do now?" "I don't know! I have no idea what to do!" The following
    dialogue was had with another man:

    "How long did they hold you in the isolation unit?"

    "Ten days."

    "Ten days?!! How did they treat you?"

    "Badly."

    "Why did they arrest you?"

    "Because I'm a Georgian."

    Many explained their arrest in similar terms. Someone said something
    in Georgian about Russian Nazism; someone showed his passport, which
    had a Russian visa, and said that they had no right to kick him out.

    Someone mentioned a week of incarceration in an isolation unit,
    where it was even forbidden to wash. Someone simply broke down in
    tears of humiliation.

    I glanced at the ombudsman, Mr. Subari, whose eyes were aflame. I
    think he was feeling these people's humiliation as keenly as they
    themselves were. And I felt burning shame for my country.

    A young woman from the Georgian Education Ministry stopped children
    and teenagers and pressed into their hands a booklet that had "Welcome
    Home!" written across it. On the other side of the booklet, a notice
    from the Education Ministry explained that all schoolchildren who had
    been forced to leave Russia would now be attending Georgian schools
    and that they should call such-and-such a number so that they would be
    accepted into school. The children hid the booklets in their pockets,
    and their mothers cried.

    The Russian Federal Migration Service stated that day that all of
    the deportees had overstayed their visas or did not have visas at all.

    The service also said that the Russian budget allocates about 27,000
    rubles for the deportation of a migrant, which includes expenditures
    for tickets, detention in a special holding area, medicine, and food.

    But in the case of the deported Georgians, the budget was economized
    by half: the deportation of a single Georgian was managed by the
    government for only 13,000 rubles. Maybe that's why Tengiz Togonidze,
    an asthmatic, died when he wasn't given medication in time.

    In Georgia yesterday thousands of people saw on their television
    screens their compatriots and their visas, both overstayed and valid.

    Thousands of people heard the story of Tengiz Togonidze. Thousands of
    people in Georgia asked each other for the third time - this was the
    third MChS plane from Russia - why it was necessary to so thoroughly
    humiliate the Georgians, who were once desired guests in Russia. I
    am certain that these people will never forget what they have seen.

    "Russia shown has its face once again," Georgian Minister for Refugees
    Georgy Kheviashvili told me. "Russia has shown that it is impossible
    to live with it in peace. Russia has done everything to push Georgia
    as far away as possible. Well, thanks for the gift. I don't doubt
    that we will be able to use what has happened in our own interests."

    I also have no doubt.

    http://www.kommersant.com/p714152/Deported _Georgians_Tbilisi/

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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