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Russia, Georgia to repair ties after Saakashvili quits - Medvedev

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  • Russia, Georgia to repair ties after Saakashvili quits - Medvedev

    Russia, Georgia to repair ties after Saakashvili quits ' Medvedev


    24/06/2010

    Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said on Thursday Moscow and Tbilisi will
    improve ties as soon as Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili leaves his
    post.

    Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said on Thursday Moscow and Tbilisi will
    improve ties as soon as Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili leaves his
    post.

    Long-standing tensions between Russia and the former Soviet republic of
    Georgia turned violent during a five-day war in August 2008, when Tbilisi
    attacked South Ossetia, where most residents are Russian passport holders,
    in an attempt to bring it back under central control.

    "As soon as Georgia gets a new leader we will have every opportunity to
    restore ties," he said at a meeting with representatives of business,
    scientific and public circles in the Stanford University.

    The Russian authorities have earlier expressed their readiness to negotiate
    with "realistically minded" political figures in Georgia, such as opposition
    leaders Nino Burdzhanadze and Zurab Nogaideli. Moscow has stressed the need
    of searching for a way out of the impasse in Russian-Georgian relations,
    saying it was "key to peace in the Trans-Caucasus."

    Medvedev said that the two neighbors currently had "dramatically poor
    relations."

    "And this is not our fault, because we think that Russia protected its
    citizens and interests. Regrettably, it led to sad consequences, but I wish
    our relations with Georgia are back to normal," he said.

    "Furthermore, I'm absolutely sure that this would happen. The two neighbors
    just cannot afford to carry on endless polemics and squabbles. We lived
    together for centuries, and we always had very good relations," Medvedev
    said.

    He said that he saw no chance to improve relations with Georgia under the
    current leadership in the ex-Soviet state.

    "I don't see any chances [for improvement] during the incumbent Georgian
    president's rule, because I am convinced that he did a bad thing, or, to put
    it in legal terms, he committed a crime," he said, adding that Saakashvili's
    responsibility was up to Georgian people to decide.

    He said that despite numerous calls to reverse the recognition of Abkhazia
    and South Ossetia, Russia would continue to treat the former Georgian
    republics as independent states.

    "This is the Russian Federation's approach," he said.

    (RIA Novosti)




    From: A. Papazian
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