How a tiny breakaway province could become the new cold war frontline

Luke Harding | Dikhazurga | April 17

The Guardian - While Georgia hopes to join Nato, its rebel Abkhazia area is being wooed by Russia

The bridge over the Ingur does not feel like a place at war. There is no gunfire, merely the noisy croaking of frogs. Down on the river bank, anglers with homemade willow rods dip for trout in the swirling turquoise water.

But this tranquil spot, on what was once a coast of the Soviet Union, may be about to become a flashpoint - not just between Georgia and its breakaway province of Abkhazia, which fought a war here in 1992-93, but between Nato and the Russian Federation.

Fifteen years after driving out Georgian troops, Abkhazia is on the brink of winning recognition from Russia. Yesterday Vladimir Putin ordered his officials to strengthen economic ties and provide consular support to residents in the separatist republic.

The president said Russia would recognise legal entities registered in Abkhazia and in South Ossetia, another breakaway region. The move stops short of recognising Abkhazia's claim to independence, but only just.

Russia's foreign ministry yesterday insisted it did not want confrontation. But yesterday's move will enrage Georgia's pro-western and US-backed government, which accuses Moscow of attempting to annex its rebel regions.

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Tina April 16, 2008 - 10:14pm

BBC

Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili has called on Russia to revoke its decision to strengthen links with his country's two breakaway regions.

Russia said on Wednesday it would intensify co-operation with Abkhazia and South Ossetia, a step described by Georgia as "de facto annexation".

"We demand Russia revise all decisions which violate Georgia's sovereignty," Mr Saakashvili told a cabinet meeting.

He also called for serious diplomatic actions from his country's partners.

Both Nato and the EU have already criticised Russia's decision to upgrade its ties with the two provinces.

Nato Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said on Wednesday it had undermined Georgian sovereignty and he called on Moscow to reverse the measures.

Georgian press slams Russia

Mr Saakashvili said the Nato leader's comments had been "very important" and he called for a special session of the UN Security Council to discuss the situation.

Earlier this month, Nato decided not to grant Georgia's request to join its Membership Action Plan but promised it would eventually become a member of the alliance.

Russia emphasised on Wednesday that it was not seeking to inflame the situation.

Rather, it said, it was trying to protect the rights and legal interests of Russian citizens who make up the majority of the population in Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

Tina April 17, 2008 - 3:09pm

By David Brunnstrom

BRUSSELS, April 18 (Reuters) - Georgia held emergency talks with NATO and European Union allies on Friday, urging them to stand firm in pressing Russia to drop plans for closer ties with two rebel regions in the former Soviet republic.

Moscow announced on Wednesday it would establish legal links with Georgia's breakaway Abkhazia and South Ossetia regions, which border Russia. Georgia calls it a move towards annexation and NATO immediately urged Russia to reverse the decision.

On Friday, U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice telephoned Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov to express concern.

"We are very concerned at the steps that have been taken and we have made our views known to the Russian government," Rice told reporters at the State Department.

Georgian Deputy Prime Minister Georgy Baramidze raised concerns with NATO Deputy Secretary-General Claudio Bisogniero and was to meet ambassadors from several NATO allies and EU External Relations Commissioner Benita Ferrero-Waldner.

Baramidze called the Russian step "very, very dangerous" and a threat not just to Georgia, but to all Europe and NATO.

"The Russians have crossed the red line and Europe and the Euro-Atlantic community must react ... to prove they are willing to protect young democracies," he told a news conference.

"We want our friends ... to persuade Russia to reverse this decision. We believe a united Europe and a united Euro-Atlantic community will be heard in the Kremlin," Barmidze said.

"We will not allow Europe to be divided by the spheres of influence, we will never ever allow the 1930s to be repeated," he said in an apparent reference to Europe's failure to stop Nazi Germany's expansionist course before World War Two.

PUTIN EASES SANCTIONS

Despite the moves on the breakaway republics, on Friday Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered restoration of postal links with Georgia and a lifting of visa restrictions. Putin also ordered his government to consult Georgia on allowing food products back on to the Russian market.

Noscow cut rail, aviation and postal links with Georgia after Georgia arrested four Russian servicemen on spying charges in late 2006. It also imposed restrictions on issuing entry visas to hundreds of thousands of Georgians who work in Russia.

Last month Russia resumed passenger flights to Georgia and said it was reopening shipping links.

"Russia is trying to create the illusion that it is determined to cooperate with Georgia," Georgian Foreign Minister David Bakradze told journalists in Tbilisi. "We're confident this move...will not mislead our American and European friends."

"If Russia believes it can annex one third of Georgia's territory and at the same time normalise ties with the remaining two thirds, then it is making a big mistake."

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Tina April 18, 2008 - 10:00am

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