dont know yet
Resume
View Resume
Profile
«« | Nov 2008 | »»
SMTWTFS
1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30
Photo Gallery
Guestbook
« View Guestbook
« Sign Guestbook
Google search News Fresh news Only good news News 24 World news
Russia agrees to restore posted by list
Posted on Fri Mar 21, 2008 11:56:29

Russia agrees to restore air link with Georgia
Mar 19 2008, 10:50

MOSCOW (AP) - Russia agreed Tuesday to restore its air link with Georgia, which has been suspended for more than 17 months amid tensions between the ex-Soviet neighbors.

Russia's Transport Ministry said in a statement that it agreed to restore the link, starting March 25, after Georgia agreed to pay a debt for navigation services provided to its planes over Russia.

While Moscow cited financial reasons for the suspension of the air link, Russia's relations with its small southern neighbor have been tense since U.S-backed President Mikhail Saakashvili came to power in late 2003, vowing to integrate Georgia closely with the West.

Russia suspended the air link in October 2006 after Georgian authorities briefly detained four Russian military officers it accused of spying.

While Moscow continues to bristle at Saakashvili's push to join NATO, the two neighbors recently have made efforts to ease tensions. Russia's President Vladimir Putin met with Saakashvili on the sidelines of a summit of leaders of ex-Soviet nations in Moscow last month, and both governments have moderated their statements.

On Tuesday, Russia's Deputy Transport Minister Boris Krol sent a letter to Georgia's Economics Minister Vakhtang Lezhava saying Russia had agreed to resume regular flights, the Transport Ministry said.

Russia's Foreign Ministry hailed the News resumption of air travel as an "important step toward restoring traditional good-neighborly ties" between the two nations.

It said the decision to restore the air link came after Georgia paid Russia's air navigation service $2 million and agreed to pay a further $1.7 million through October to fully settle its debt.

There was no immediate comment from Georgian officials.

Despite the restoration of air travel, tensions remain over what Georgian authorities see as Russia's support for Georgia's breakaway provinces, Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

Both regions have had de facto independence since wars in the 1990s, when Russian peacekeepers were deployed to observe cease-fires. No country recognizes their governments, but Moscow has tacitly supported their autonomy - granting most of their residents Russian passports and maintaining trade ties.

Russia has warned that Kosovo's declaration of independence last month - and Western recognition of it - could fuel other separatist movements, particularly in the former Soviet Union.

Moscow gave no immediate response to the Abkhazian separatist parliament's appeal for international recognition earlier this month. Nevertheless, Moscow encouraged Abkhazia's defiance by lifting trade sanctions on the province.

Russia's parliament could vote as early as this week on a nonbinding resolution calling on the government to move toward recognizing Abkhazia as independent. If passed, the motion would anger Georgia, which has vowed to bring the

separatist provinces back into fold.




» More ...

0 comments | Add comment

SyndicateSyndicate GBlogger
Get an RSS Feed, to get up to date blog posts of this user.
RSS Feed URL
http://genblogger.com/rss/gblogger_4764.xml
Categories
• Main
• General