Sat, Feb 11 2012

Georgia, Russia to re-open border

Fri, Dec 25 2009 10:13 CET 2387 Views 1 Comment
Georgia, Russia to re-open border

FLASHBACK: Dozens of refugees and activists yelling 'Russia out' wave Georgia's flag while marching towards a Russian check-point near Kaspi, on the road from Tbilisi to Gori, August 19 2008.

Georgia says it has reached a deal with Russia to re-open a key border crossing.  The move is aimed at easing tensions between the two neighbors following a brief war last year.

Georgia's Deputy Foreign Minister Nino Kalandadze has told reporters in Tblisi that Georgia and Russia have agreed that the Verkhny Lars transit point, which closed three years ago, will re-open in March next year.

Kalandadze says Wednesday's agreement follows negotiations between the two neighbors with the assistance of Switzerland. 

The border mentioned in the agreement is the only highway crossing between Russia and Georgia that does not go through the Moscow backed rebel regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

Both regions declared independence following a brief war between Russian and Georgian forces in 2008.

Kalandadze says she hopes the re-opening of the border will make it easier for travel and trade.

She explains that delegations from both countries agreed it is necessary to allow Georgian citizens and cargo to cross the border.  Kalandadze says a formal protocol on re-opening the crossing will be finalized within two weeks.

She says international traffic between Russia and Georgia is scheduled to start March 1, 2010.

Source: VOANews.com

Analysts say the move marks a significant breakthrough in diplomatic relations, which ended last year following the August war between Russia and Georgia.

Georgia renovated the border crossing this year, with nearly $2.5 million from the United States.

Russia closed the checkpoint in 2006.  Georgian officials said that decision was politically motivated.  There have been tensions between Moscow over Tbilisi's attempts to build closer ties with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and other Western institutions. 
 

  • Print
  • Send via email
  • Translate to
  • Share:

Comments

Anonymous brycescu Fri, Dec 25 2009 22:37 CET

"Moscow-backed rebel regions of South Ossetia & Abkhazia" ?

They are independent Republics who were attacked by Georgia without provocation..


To post comments, please, Login or Register.


Please read the The Sofia Echo forum comments policy.

Georgians vote in first election since 2008 war

Georgians to elect 64 local government councils. President Saakashvili's party, The United National Movement, is expected to fare well in the elections.

Is the EU ready to face another Russian gas crisis?

Russia and the European Union have agreed on an early warning system if another natural gas cutoff looms. Some say that Bulgaria, among other countries hard-hit by the January 2009 crisis, is now better prepared. Not everyone is convinced.

Debating ‘Enlargement lite’

Assessing the EU’s European Neighbourhood Policy and its Eastern Partnership

EU report: Georgian attack started war with Russia

Georgia and Russia both claimed to find vindication in Wednesday's independent report on the causes of their 2008 war, but neither seemed likely to be able to take the moral high ground because of its blunt judgments.

Russia’s statelets game

Is Moscow’s policy in the Caucasus a pursuit of strong imperial ambition or motivated by a fear of appearing weak?

The guns of August: non-event with consequences

The political fallout of the Russia-Georgia war of August 2008 affects far more than the main combatants: it has had a profound impact on the post-Soviet space, the United States, the European Union, even China and Turkey. Ivan Krastev draws up a balance-sheet of a toxic conflict, and looks ahead.

More in this category

Auction reveals Ceausescu’s personal age of plenty

Iranian silver-plated pigeons, African leopard skins and a Chinese bronze yak were among the 70 items sold in an auction of gifts presented to Romania’s former dictator Nicolae Ceausescu and his wife Elena.

EC praises airports for progress in dealing with extreme weather

Airports were also showing signs of better co-ordination and providing passengers with accurate real-time information, compared to previous period of travel disruption, transport commissioner Siim Kallas said.

Hungary's PM condemns international critics amid economic uncertainty

Viktor Orban defends government's record, new constitution in state-of-the-nation address as he slams European Commission.

Polish PM, digitalisation minister hold public debates on ACTA ratification

PM Donald Tusk invited authors, NGOs, experts and bloggers to a debate on the ACTA copyright agreement, but several key organisations, including the Helsinki Foundation, rejected the invitation claiming that the talks will likely offer no opportunity to discuss concrete issues.

Protesters clash in Budapest as controversial theatre director takes stage

'Dirty Jews' and 'Dirty Nazis' were the most popular chants when two groups clashed in front of Új Színház (New Theatre)