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TBILISI: A Key Moment In 2007: Baku-Akhalkalaki-Kars Railway Constru

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  • TBILISI: A Key Moment In 2007: Baku-Akhalkalaki-Kars Railway Constru

    A KEY MOMENT IN 2007: BAKU-AKHALKALAKI-KARS RAILWAY CONSTRUCTION STARTS
    By M. Alkhazashvili

    The Messenger
    Jan 9 2008
    Georgia

    Reflecting on events in the South Caucasus in 2007, the launch of
    construction on the Baku-Akhalkalaki-Kars railway was one of the most
    high-profile regional projects to date.

    An inauguration ceremony was held on November 21, the same day
    Turkey and Georgia signed a free trade agreement, by the presidents
    of Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey.

    Then-president Mikheil Saakashvili described the project as a
    "geopolitical revolution" that would provide an alternative to the
    Russian Trans-Siberian railway for Chinese cargo, at the ceremony
    in Marabda, a town south of Tbilisi. He also said it would see the
    creation of "tens and hundreds of thousands of jobs in Georgia"
    and help stimulate the local economy in Samtskhe-Javakheti province.

    Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev mentioned the project in his New
    Year speech, noting that obstacles to its implementation had been
    overcome and construction begun.

    Those obstacles included political opposition to the project from
    Washington, in response to Armenian complaints that the railroad is
    an intentional attempt to isolate their country.

    The project will oversee the construction of 150 kilometers of new
    railway, 29 kilometers on Georgian territory and 76 kilometers on
    Turkish, as well as the rehabilitation of 183 kilometers of the
    Akhalkalaki-Marabda-Tbilisi railway.

    While Georgia is likely to reap some benefit during the construction
    stage of the project, it is unclear whether the railway will be an
    economic success story in the long run, given competition from Iranian
    and Russian corridors.

    The Baku-Akhalkalaki-Kars railway may therefore prove to be most
    significant as an example of regional cooperation, and more memorable
    for its political, rather than economic, implications.
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