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Moscow Cries Foul As Georgia Arrests Four Russian 'Spies'

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  • Moscow Cries Foul As Georgia Arrests Four Russian 'Spies'

    MOSCOW CRIES FOUL AS GEORGIA ARRESTS FOUR RUSSIAN 'SPIES'

    Agence France Presse -- English
    September 27, 2006 Wednesday 7:46 PM GMT

    Four Russian officers suspected of spying were arrested Wednesday
    in Georgia, sparking furious demands in Moscow for their immediate
    release.

    "Four Russian officers from the military intelligence service (GRU)
    and 12 citizens of Georgia who were spying in Tbilisi, Batumi and
    all over Georgian territory were arrested in a special operation,"
    Georgian Interior Minister Vano Merabishvili told a press briefing.

    Merabishvili added that the Georgian authorities wanted to question a
    fifth Russian officer, who the Georgian authorities fear may attempt
    to flee the country via "diplomatic channels."

    Moscow reacted furiously to the news with the Russian foreign ministry
    calling for the "immediate release" of the four and accusing Tblisi
    of an "anti-Russian policy."

    The ministry said in a statement that it had called in Georgia's
    ambassador to Russia and "passed him a note demanding that the Georgian
    authorities release the Russian officers immediately."

    The head of Russia's armed forces, General Yuri Baluyevski, reacted
    with equal anger, accusing Georgian Defence Minister, Iraki Okruachvili
    of acting "arbitrarily," interfax reported.

    The foreign ministry statement added that the Georgian accusations
    against the Russian soldiers were "baseless" and constituted a
    "brutal act showing that Georgia's leaders are carrying out an
    anti-Russian policy."

    On Wednesday evening, several hundred police vehicles were seen
    surrounding the Tbilisi headquarters for Russian military bases that
    cover Georgia, Azerbaijan and Armenia.

    The Georgian authorities are understood to believe the fifth officer
    they want to question may be hiding in the building.

    Tblisi suspects the five officers of gathering information on Georgia's
    military capacity, its energy resources and on NATO-run programmes
    in the country, Merabishvili told journalists.

    Two of the arrested officers were lieutenant colonels, who were
    apprehended in Tblisi.

    The other two, the captain of a frigate and another lietenant colonel,
    were arrested in Batumi, western Georgia, where Russia has a military
    base.

    The espionage activites had been going on for "a number of years,"
    Merabishvili said.

    The interior minister added that the 12 Georgians arrested with the
    Russian "spies" were accused of "high treason".

    The officers are also accused of having been "implicated" in a bomb
    attack in the town of Gori, 80 kilometres (50 miles) west of Tblisi,
    which killed three police officers and injured 23 other people.

    Relations between Moscow and Tblisi have detriorated steadily since
    the January 2004 election of pro-Western President Mikheil Saakashvili.

    Saakashvili wants his country to join NATO and also wants to bring
    two pro-Russian breakaway regions of Georgia - Abkazia and Southern
    Ossetia - under Tblisi's control once more.

    Georgia has also been demanding for several years that Russia dismantle
    its two military bases in the country -- aside from the complex in
    Batumi it has another base in Akhalkalaki, southern Georgia.

    The bases were set up in the 1990s to help put an end to fighting
    between Tblisi and the two rebel provinces. Under the terms of a 2005
    deal between Moscow and Tblisi they are supposed to be dismantled
    in 2008.

    Saakashvili was in the Kodori gorges region on Wednesday, an area
    near to Abkazia. During his visit he promised "to begin the process
    of returning Abkazia" to Georgia.

    Georgia was formerly part of the Soviet Union.
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