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TBILISI: Saakashvili Pledges To Help Minorities

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  • TBILISI: Saakashvili Pledges To Help Minorities

    SAAKASHVILI PLEDGES TO HELP MINORITIES
    By Etuna Tsotniashvili

    The Messenger
    Dec 24 2008
    Georgia

    "Every ethnic group in Georgia should feel that they are
    representatives of the country," President Saakashvili stated at a
    meeting with the staff of news programme National Moambe, which is
    broadcast in various languages, on December 22.

    The President said the Georgian Government should take additional
    measures to help ethnic minority groups to learn the Georgian language
    better, something which would make it easier for them to integrate
    with Georgian society. "We should improve the process of learning
    the Georgian language for ethnic minorities, or rather, I would say
    'so-called ethnic minorities' because I don't accept such a term. I
    don't think they are either minorities or should be separated out
    by ethnicity, but the learning of the Georgian language should be
    enhanced in Javakheti, Kvemo Kartli and other regions of Georgia
    where other ethnic group representatives live," he said.

    Saakashvili talked about those teachers who work in areas populated
    by minority ethnic groups and stated that after consultation with the
    Education Minister the decision was made to increase the salaries of
    teachers to GEL 1,000. "This will enable us to attract professionals
    to teach there," he said.

    Saakashvili said that the Ministry of Education made a very serious
    mistake in expecting minority ethnic students to pass national entry
    exams of the same standard as those for native Georgian speakers and
    promised that this mistake will be rectified soon. "We should give
    them special privileges to help them pass entry exams. Several hundred
    representatives of minority ethnic groups should study at Georgian
    higher educational institutions under the simplified programmes,"
    he said, adding that the Government should create some incentives
    for ethnic minorities so that they will stay in Georgia and continue
    studying in local universities and institutions rather than going to
    Baku or Yerevan.

    At the end of his speech Saakashvili stated that Georgia's
    de-occupation will come soon and the unity previously created with
    various ethnic groups will be decisive. The enemy called us everything
    they could, but did not call us chauvinists or nationalists or accuse
    us of pursuing ethnically discriminatory policies. "They failed
    because such a position is totally unacceptable for the present
    Georgian authorities, me personally, our nation and our multi-ethnic
    society," Saakashvili said. "Our multi-ethnicity is not our weakness;
    it is Georgia's greatest wealth and strength," he added.
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