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EU voices concern about violence in southern Caucasus

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  • EU voices concern about violence in southern Caucasus

    Associated Press Worldstream
    September 13, 2006 Wednesday

    EU voices concern about violence in southern Caucasus



    A senior European Union official on Wednesday expressed alarm over
    violence in the ex-Soviet Southern Caucasus, reaffirming that
    conflicts in the region must be solved by peaceful means.

    Peter Semneby, the European Union's top envoy to the South Caucasus
    region, voiced particular concern about the situation in Georgia,
    where several people have been killed recently in clashes between
    government forces and separatists from the breakaway province of
    South Ossetia.

    South Ossetia, which has close ties with Russia, is set to hold a
    referendum on its independence in November, a move that has angered
    Tbilisi.

    Semneby reiterated that the EU would not recognize the referendum's
    result. "This referendum doesn't help solving the conflict. The EU
    recognizes Georgia's integrity and that is why this referendum will
    be of no importance to us," he said.

    Semneby said Russia and the European Union should work together to
    help solve conflicts in South Ossetia and another breakaway Georgian
    province, Abkhazia, but hinted that Moscow's recent ban on Georgian
    wines and mineral water over alleged sanitary violations was
    counterproductive.

    "Georgian wines and Georgian mineral water are being imported to the
    EU and we didn't find any dangerous components in those products,"
    Semneby said.

    The Georgian government has accused Russia of backing separatists in
    both rebel provinces, while the Kremlin accused Georgia of fanning up
    tensions.

    Turning to other ex-Soviet Caucasus nations, Armenia and Azerbaijan,
    Semneby stressed the importance of moving forward in solving their
    dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh, an enclave inside Azerbaijan populated
    largely by Armenians.
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