Saakashvili accuses Moscow from UN floor
Aysor.am
Friday,September 23
Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili used the UN floor on Thursday
to accuse Moscow of terrorism and reiterate the claims that Russia
occupies Georgian territories.
"Unfortunately, instead of dialogue, the response... has come in the
form of a dozen terrorist acts targeting Georgia - attacks directly
organized and supervised, as it is well confirmed by different
international actors - by officers of the Russian secret services,"
Saakashvili told the UN General Assembly.
He also said that Russia uses "embargo, blackmail and brutal dictates"
against Ukraine, Moldova or Belarus.
In his speech Saakashvili also spoke how the Rose Revolution brought
into power in Georgia "young reformers" who immediately launched
reforms and despite of "mistakes" achieved "astonishing results",
making "greatest progress on Transparency International corruption
index since 2003 than any other state in the world" and becoming "one
of the easiest places in the world to do business."
From: A. Papazian
Aysor.am
Friday,September 23
Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili used the UN floor on Thursday
to accuse Moscow of terrorism and reiterate the claims that Russia
occupies Georgian territories.
"Unfortunately, instead of dialogue, the response... has come in the
form of a dozen terrorist acts targeting Georgia - attacks directly
organized and supervised, as it is well confirmed by different
international actors - by officers of the Russian secret services,"
Saakashvili told the UN General Assembly.
He also said that Russia uses "embargo, blackmail and brutal dictates"
against Ukraine, Moldova or Belarus.
In his speech Saakashvili also spoke how the Rose Revolution brought
into power in Georgia "young reformers" who immediately launched
reforms and despite of "mistakes" achieved "astonishing results",
making "greatest progress on Transparency International corruption
index since 2003 than any other state in the world" and becoming "one
of the easiest places in the world to do business."
From: A. Papazian