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BAKU: Does Armenia Find It Boring And Unprofitable To Live In Peace

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  • BAKU: Does Armenia Find It Boring And Unprofitable To Live In Peace

    DOES ARMENIA FIND IT BORING AND UNPROFITABLE TO LIVE IN PEACE WITH GEORGIA?

    Elmira Tariverdiyeva

    Trend News Agency
    Sept 8 2009
    Azerbaijan

    Lately there has been an impression that Yerevan finds living in peace,
    with the relative majority of its neighbors, boring. But taking a look
    at the future, it is unprofitable for Armenia to maintain friendly
    relations with some countries, namely Georgia.

    No sooner had the world community managed to discuss Turkey's intention
    to improve relations with Armenia, when a new topic for discussion
    rose up, on the Georgian region of Javakheti, bordering Armenia and
    compactly populated with Armenians.

    In early September, during a meeting with representatives of the
    Central Office of the Armenian Foreign Ministry and the Armenian
    Diplomatic Corps, the Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan said that
    Armenia's leadership must make every possible effort to support the
    Armenians living in Georgia, ARMENIA Today said.

    Sargsyan said that Yerevan wants the Georgian leadership to give
    Armenian the status of regional language in the Georgian region of
    Javakheti.. Moreover, Armenia is willing to provide a diocese of the
    Armenian Church operating in Georgia with formal registration and the
    proper protection of Armenian monuments in Georgia, which amount to
    over 600, according to their sources.

    Such proposals from their neighbors have caused a negative reaction
    in Georgia, a country which has not fully recovered after consequences
    of the August war and the occupation of its two regions.

    Georgian State Minister for Reintegration, Timur Yakobashvili,
    commented on Sargsyan's statement. "Let Armenia deal with the spread
    of the Armenian language in its own country," he said.

    Georgia's sharp denial of Sargsyan's initiatives is well-founded. For
    many years Armenia has emphatically raised the issue concerning the
    difficult situation of the Armenian population in Javakheti.

    Nothing happens just like that, and political leaders are
    unlikely to declare such serious willing without expecting for the
    effect. Intensification of Armenia's claims towards Georgian leadership
    is Yerevan's first step in requesting autonomy form Georgia, and in
    the future ... who knows.

    Moreover, Sargsyan's words may confuse many Georgian citizens. Even if
    Tbilisi were to give up and fulfill all Armenian requirements, the same
    requirements could be made to Georgia concerning territories compactly
    populated by other ethnic minorities (such as Azerbaijanis). Their
    number is no less than the Armenians.

    Why does Armenia spite Georgia so intentionally, after she has had
    such a hard time? One can answer this question by thinking about the
    possible scenario of future events. The Nagorno-Karabakh settlement
    is progressing, and it is possible to solve, sooner or later. Then
    Armenia, deprived of the economic benefits from this geographical
    location it had for such a long period, would find a completely
    logical and stable alternative in Georgia having internal problems.

    Possible opening of Armenian-Turkish border has made observers think
    Georgia is losing its importance as a transit country for the United
    States and Europe.

    According to U.S agency Bloomberg, Armenia may replace Georgia
    as a transit country because of Georgia's increasing political
    instability. The Turkish Daily Star, which News.am agency cites,
    reported with reference to sources that Turkey too may support Armenian
    joining the Nabucco project amid improved relations between the two
    countries. This would be beneficial to the EU, which would prefer
    Armenia as a transit country over Georgia.

    The safety of these projects is still the most important thing for all
    investors of transit projects through Caucasian countries, whether the
    railway route from Azerbaijan to Kars, or the pipeline, ensuring to
    divert Azerbaijani fuel to Europe. Armenia will meet all requirements
    of western investors as a transit country, once the borders with
    Turkey are opened and the agreement with Azerbaijan is reached.

    The Armenian President's statements must not be underestimated. Tbilisi
    will make a big mistake if, as before, it does not give due importance
    to current events. "As it is known, the conflicts have traditionally
    begun with rather local arguments. First, they begin with sharp
    protest from leaders, indignant about the marginalized situation
    of compatriots in a neighboring country, then a war of words in the
    media and incidents at the border," the independent Georgian expert,
    Zaal Anjaparidze, said in an article published by ARMENIA Today.

    Perhaps, it is now necessary for Georgia to recall those sad
    experiences of the Armenian-Azerbaijani Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.
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