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Azeri,Georgian,Turkish Leaders Push Forward With Rail Project

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  • Azeri,Georgian,Turkish Leaders Push Forward With Rail Project

    AZERI,GEORGIAN,TURKISH LEADERS PUSH FORWARD WITH RAIL PROJECT

    US-Azerbaijan Chamber of Commerce USACC
    July 24 2008

    The presidents of Turkey, Azerbaijan and Georgia came together in
    eastern Turkey Thursday to push forward with a railway project linking
    the three countries. The ceremony, broadcast live on television,
    marked the beginning of construction of the 79-kilometer Turkish
    section of a 180-kilometer railroad that will link Baku, Tbilisi and
    the eastern Turkish city of Kars

    The project, expected to cost about $450 million, involves the building
    of tracks between Kars and Tbilisi and the upgrading of an existing
    link between the Georgian and Azeri capitals.

    Construction on the Georgian side began last year.

    The railroad is expected to become operational in 2011 and carry 1
    million passengers and 6.5 million metric tons of cargo annually,
    forming a key transport connection between Asia and Europe, officials
    said Thursday.

    The three presidents - Abdullah Gul of Turkey, Ilham Aliyev of
    Azerbaijan and Mikhail Saakashvili of Georgia - hailed the project
    as a new sign of flourishing ties between their countries, which in
    2006 launched a major U.S.-backed oil pipeline from Baku to Turkey's
    Mediterranean port of Ceyhan.

    "This project will boost stability and welfare in the Caucasus,"
    Gul said at the ceremony in Kars.

    "It is open to all other regional countries which contribute to
    stability and are committed to good neighborly relations," he said.

    His remarks appeared aimed at neighboring Armenia, which remains
    officially at war with Azerbaijan over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh
    enclave and doesn't have diplomatic relations with Turkey.

    Increasing cooperation between Turkey, Georgia and Azerbaijan since
    the dissolution of the Soviet Union has resulted also in a conduit
    carrying Azeri gas to Greece, which will be extended to Italy and
    the rest of Western Europe.
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