Gas Supply Of Armenia Restored

GAS SUPPLY OF ARMENIA RESTORED

Noyan Tapan
Dec 21 2006

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 21, NOYAN TAPAN. On the afternoon of December 21
the damaged section of the gas pipeline in Georgia was restored
and now the previous volume of Russian gas is being supplied to
Armenia. NT was informed about it from Shushan Sardarian, spokeswoman
of ArmRusgazprom CJSC. To recap, the gas pipeline was damaged on
the morning of December 18 by an avalanche in the Ananuri-Dusheti
section. The avalanche damaged the 1.2 thousand mm-diameter pipe.

After the accident, one third of the necessary volume of gas was
supplied to Armenia through a reserve gas pipeline.

Aliev Again Rejects Karabakh Independence

ALIEV AGAIN REJECTS KARABAKH INDEPENDENCE
By Emil Danielyan

Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
Dec 21 2006

Azerbaijan will never agree to any peaceful settlement that would
fail to restore its control over Nagorno-Karabakh, President Ilham
Aliev reiterated on Thursday.

"Nagorno-Karabakh will never be granted independence," Azerbaijani
news agencies quoted him as saying during a visit to the Azerbaijani
exclave of Nakhichevan.

Aliev said the Karabakh Armenians should settle for a status of
autonomy within Azerbaijan now or risk being offered no self-rule
at all in the future. He again claimed that Armenia will find it
increasingly hard to compete with his oil-rich nation.

"Azerbaijan’s state budget is seven times bigger than Armenia’s,
and its military budget equals that country’s entire budget," he said.

The most recent peace plan put forward by French, Russian and U.S.
mediators appears to allow for the possibility of international
recognition of Karabakh’s secession from Azerbaijan. It would enable
Karabakh’s predominantly Armenian population to determine the disputed
territory’s status in a referendum.

Despite their diametrically opposite positions on Karabakh’s status,
the conflicting parties claim to have made considerable progress
towards a compromise solution over the past two years. Aliev and
his Armenian counterpart Robert Kocharian raised fresh hopes for a
Karabakh breakthrough following their latest face-to-face talks held
in Minsk on November 28.

But Kocharian made it clear last week that he will not sign any
agreements with Azerbaijan before next spring’s Armenian parliamentary
elections. Analysts doubt that a peace deal will be cut before
presidential elections due in both Armenia and Azerbaijan in 2008.

Church Leaders In Bethlehem Visit

CHURCH LEADERS IN BETHLEHEM VISIT

BBC News, UK
Dec 21 2006

A mass was held in the Grotto, thought to be Jesus’ birthplace The
Archbishop of Canterbury and the head of the Roman Catholic Church in
England and Wales have arrived in Bethlehem on a Christmas pilgrimage.

Rowan Williams and Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O’Connor said they wanted
to highlight how Israel’s security measures were strangling the town.

Cardinal Murphy-O’Connor said Israelis and Palestinians needed
international support to solve their problems.

Two other church leaders joined them on the four-day visit to the
Holy Land.

The two archbishops travelled with Bishop Nathan Hovhannisian,
of the Armenian Church of Great Britain, and the Rev David Coffey,
of the Free Churches.

Jesus’ birthplace

During their visit, they toured the Church of the Nativity and recited
prayers in the grotto where Jesus is believed to have been born.

The church leaders are concerned about the effect of the barrier
separating the West Bank from Israel on Christians living in the
region.

Dr Williams said he also worries about an exodus of Christians from
Bethlehem, changing its historic Christian nature.

You cannot expect with this intractable position for the Israelis
and the Palestinians to do it all by themselves

Cardinal Murphy-O’Connor

"The sheer variety of communities within the Palestinian areas has
always been one of its strengths.

"Co-existence has been easy and often fruitful.

"If that were to end that would be a very sad signal for the Middle
East and the rest of the world."

Cardinal Murphy-O’Connor has previously said the town was "blocked in"
by the Israeli security wall and checkpoints.

Speaking on BBC News 24, he said: "You cannot expect with this
intractable position for the Israelis and the Palestinians to do it
all by themselves."

He said the international community needed to help resolve their
differences.

BBC correspondent Wyre Davis, who is in Bethlehem, said in a good
year 50,000 pilgrims would visit Bethlehem, but this year fewer than
5,000 are expected.

He said some say this is a consequence of the wall, but Israel argues
it is because of general violence in the region.

Nagorno-Karabakh Fails To Make Progress After 12 Years

NAGORNO-KARABAKH FAILS TO MAKE PROGRESS AFTER 12 YEARS
By Dan Shea

dpa German Press Agency
Dec 20 2006

By Dan Shea, Moscow/Baku- Though negotiations are wrapped in secrecy
to hide 12 years of failure, the former Soviet Union’s bloodiest
conflict pitting Armenia against Azerbaijan may be edging closer
to talks that could yield peace – or destroy current diplomatic
efforts entirely. Earlier this year, a raft of new proposals for
Nagorno-Karabakh, a breakaway region in the oil-rich Caucasus republic
of Azerbaijan, received rare positive assessments among international
mediators in Moscow, Paris, Bucharest and Brussels.

But despite several meetings during 2006 between Azeri President
Ilham Aliyev and and Armenian President Robert Kocharyan, no progress
appears to have been made on resolving the conflict.

Aliyev has warned that if talks fail, "Azerbaijan will definitely
reconsider its strategy, tactics and behaviour."

The 4,400-square-kilometre enclave in western Azerbaijan – populated
almost entirely by ethnic Armenians – was ravaged by war in 1988-94
and is today occupied by Armenian troops.

Underscoring the sensitivity of a conflict that left an estimated
35,000 dead and threatens to reignite, the proposals made earlier
this year were kept secret.

Since hostilities ended, the Armenian leadership in Yerevan has
insisted on independence for the region. Baku says it will allow "the
greatest measure" of autonomy, but refuses to part with the enclave.

"The position of Armenia is founded on dreams and illusions. They
think a temporary military supremacy gives them the right to think
about the separation of Nagorno-Karabakh from Azerbaijan," Aliyev says.

Efforts aimed at talks come amid a strong flow of petrodollars into
Aliyev’s coffers, with BP’s 4-billion-dollar Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan
pipeline well into its second year of operation.

President Aliyev has made it clear he wants to spend these funds on
arms. Last summer he told his country’s parliament that Azerbaijan’s
defence budget should surpass Armenia’s entire state spending.

Almost all the 500,000 Azeris that once lived in Nagorno-Karabakh
having long since fled. The region’s residents buy their food using
the Armenian dram and the streets are patrolled by troops from Yerevan.

But 12 years after the official end of fighting, Azeri leaders remain
bitter over the scars left by the Soviet collapse and the ensuing war.

Television commercials and billboards appeal in English to the BP
workers in Baku, reminding them of Azeris displaced from their home
villages in the exodus that accompanied the war.

The presidential bookstore in Baku carries such titles as "The Myth
of a Great Armenia" and "Blood Politics, Or the Philosophy of Revenge:
Armenia in Azerbaijan."

And under the Soviet-era television tower, perched on a promontory
overlooking the skyscraper-studded city, is Martyrs’ Alley, row
after row of graves – most bearing photographs – of Azeris who died
in Nagorno-Karabakh.

The conflict’s roots are found in the earliest days of the Soviet
Union, when Lenin in 1923 created the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous
District within the Soviet Socialist Republic of Azerbaijan, rather
than Armenia, in an effort to win Turkish sympathies.

But with Baku’s perestroika-era leader Heidar Aliyev – the current
president’s late father – encouraging his countrymen to settle in
the 95-per-cent Armenian region in the late 1980s, calls for an
independent Nagorno-Karabakh found resonance in Moscow.

A peaceful nationalist movement quickly turned violent. During and
after the Soviet collapse, Yerevan and Baku vied for Russian support
in equipping their armies as a full-scale war broke out.

For six years the upper hand in the conflict was determined by the
amount of weaponry Moscow supplied, Russian defence analyst Pavel
Felgenhauer said.

"Armenia had the advantage, then Azerbaijan, then Armenia again,"
Felgenhauer said, adding that Armenia was able to decisively gain
control of the region in 1993 after diplomatic relations between
Moscow and Baku took a turn for the worse.

With Armenian forces occupying nearly one-seventh of Azerbaijan in
1994, peace talks began.

For 12 years negotiations went nowhere, and the Nagorno-Karabakh
question became the trump card in the politics of both countries.

Armenian President Kocharyan was a leader in the breakaway region,
and Azerbaijan’s Ilham Aliyev rode to power on the coattails of his
father, who promised to reclaim the lost territory.

But although Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan earlier this
year spoke of "a real possibility of a rapprochement" with the Azeri
side, Baku now may prefer to hold out.

Since neither side would want to resume the debilitating fighting,
Azerbaijan’s rising clout as a supplier of oil and gas in the Caucasus
gives it the option of waiting until it would be guaranteed control
over Nagorno-Karabakh.

"Negotiations haven’t led to anything, and they won’t lead to
anything," Felgenhauer says.

Former Armavir Marzpet And MP Suspected Of Murdering Head Of Nalband

FORMER ARMAVIR MARZPET AND MP SUSPECTED OF MURDERING HEAD OF NALBANDYAN VILLAGE

ArmRadio.am
20.12.2006 14:46

Representative of the "Thriving Armenia" Party’s Armavir regional
structure Vanik Hayrapetyan told "Radiolur" that the villagers accuse
former Armavir Marzpet Albert Heroyan and MP Nahapet Gevorgyan of
murdering Head of Nalbandyan village Roland Lazarian. "They say it
is the handwork of Novo (Nahapet Gevorgyan) and Heroyan. Heads of
villages, schoolmasters and the Marzpet were present at the elections
and they wanted Roland Lazarian’s rival to win, but people won. This
is a political order. They want to achieve their objective," Vanik
Hayrapetyan told "Radiolur."

Georgia’s Pipeline Repair Delay May Leave Armenia Without Gas

GEORGIA’S PIPELINE REPAIR DELAY MAY LEAVE ARMENIA WITHOUT GAS

RIA Novosti, Russia
Dec 19 2006

MOSCOW, December 19 (RIA Novosti) – Armenia’s underground gas storage
facilities may be empty this winter if Georgia fails to restore
its pipeline pumping Russian gas on time, an official spokesman for
Russian energy giant Gazprom said Tuesday.

"If repair work continues for a long time, Armenia may have no
more gas in its underground storage facilities this winter," Sergei
Kupriyanov said.

The Georgian Gas Transportation Company reported Monday that an
avalanche damaged the pipeline pumping Russian gas to Georgia and
Armenia in the early hours of December 18.

A reserve branch pumping 1.2 million cu m of gas per day is currently
being used to ensure supplies to Armenia, which in the past has
received around 10 million cu m per day in winter.

Kupriyanov said the Georgian Gas Transportation Company had promised
to repair the pipeline Monday but later said it will take several days.

He said Russia and Armenia, which has not received the required
volumes of Russian gas for two days and is using gas from its storage
facilities, expects Georgia "to take all the necessary measures to
restore [the pipeline] as soon as possible."

Robert Fisk: Different narratives in the Middle East

Robert Fisk: Different narratives in the Middle East
No, Israelis are not Nazis. But it’s time we talked of war crimes
Published: 16 December 2006

Oh how – when it comes to the realities of history – the Muslims of
the Middle East exhaust my patience. After years of explaining to Arab
friends that the Jewish Holocaust – the systematic, planned murder of
six million Jews by the Nazis, is an indisputable fact – I am still
met with a state of willing disbelief.

And now, this week, the preposterous President Mahmoud Ahmadinajad of
Iran opens up his own country to obloquy and shame by holding a
supposedly impartial "conference" on the Jewish Holocaust to repeat
the lies of the racists who, if they did not direct their hatred
towards Jews, would most assuredly turn venomously against those other
Semites, the Arabs of the Middle East.

How, I always ask, can you expect the West to understand and accept
the ethnic cleansing of 750,000 men, women and children from Palestine
in 1948 when you will not try to comprehend the enormity done the Jews
of Europe? And, here, of course, is the wretched irony of the whole
affair. For what the Muslims of the Middle East should be doing is
pointing out to the world that they were not responsible for the
Jewish Holocaust, that, horrific and evil though it was, it is a
shameful, outrageous injustice that they, the Palestinians, should
suffer for something they had no part in and – even more disgusting-
that they should be treated as if they have. But, no, Ahmadinajad has
neither the brains nor the honesty to grasp this simple, vital
equation.

True, the Palestinian Grand Mufti of Jerusalem shook hands with
Hitler. I met his only surviving wartime Palestinian comrade before he
died and it is perfectly true that the intemperate, devious Had
al-Husseini made some vile anti-Jewish wartime speeches in German, in
one of which he advised the Nazis to close Jewish refugee exit routes
to Palestine and deport Jews eastwards (why east, I wonder?) and
helped to raise a Muslim SS unit in Bosnia. I have copies of his
speeches and his photograph hangs in the Yad Vashem Museum. But the
downtrodden, crushed, occupied, slaughtered Palestinians of our time –
of Sabra and Chatila, of Jenin and Beit Yanoun – were not even alive
in the Second World War.

Yet it is to the eternal shame of Israel and its leaders that they
should pretend as if the Palestinians were participants in the Second
World War. When the Israeli army was advancing on Beirut in 1982, the
then Israeli prime minister, Menachem Begin, wrote a crazed letter to
US president, Ronald Reagan, explaining that he felt he was marching
on "Berlin" to liquidate "Hitler" (ie Yasser Arafat, who was busy
comparing his own guerrillas to the defenders of Stalingrad).

That courageous Israeli writer Uri Avneri wrote an open letter to
Begin. "Mr Prime Minister," he began, "Hitler is dead." But this did
not stop Ariel Sharon from trying the same trick in 1989. By talking
to the US State Department, Arafat was "like Hitler, who also wanted
so much to negotiate with the Allies in the second half of the Second
World War", Sharon told the Wall Street Journal. "… Arafat is the
same kind of enemy."

Needless to say, any comparison between the behaviour of German troops
in the Second World War and Israeli soldiers today (with their
constantly betrayed claim to "purity of arms") is denounced as
anti-Semitic. Generally, I believe that is the correct
reaction. Israelis are not committing mass rape, murder or installing
gas chambers for the Palestinians.

But the acts of Israeli troops are not always so easy to divorce from
such insane parallels. During the Sabra and Chatila massacres – when
Israel sentits enraged Lebanese Christian Phalangist militias into the
camps after telling them that Palestinians had killed their beloved
leader – up to 1,700 Palestinians were slaughtered. Israeli troops
watched – and did nothing.

The Israeli novelist A B Yehoshua observed that, even if his country’s
soldiers had not known what was happening, "then this would be the
same lack of knowledge of the Germans who stood outside Buchenwald and
Treblinka and didnot know what was happening".

After the killings of Jenin, an Israeli officer suggested to his men,
according to the Israeli press, that, with close quarter fighting,
they might study the tactics of Nazi troops in Warsaw in 1944.

And I have to say – indeed, it needs to be said – that, after the
countless Lebanese civilian refugees ruthlessly cut down on the roads
of Lebanon by the Israeli air force in 1978, 1982, 1993, 1996 and
again this summer, how can one avoid being reminded of the Luftwaffe
attacks on the equally helpless French refugees of 1940? Many
thousands of Lebanese have been killed in this way over the past 25
years.

And please spare me the nonsense about "human shields". What about the
marked ambulance of women and children rocketed by a low-flying
Israeli helicopter in 1996? Or the refugee convoy whose women and
children were torn to pieces by an equally low-flying Israeli air
force helicopter as they fled along the roads after being ordered to
leave their homes by the Israelis?

No, Israelis are not Nazis. But it’s time we talked of war crimes
unless they stop these attacks on refugees. The Arabs are entitled to
talk the same way.

They should. But they must stop lying about Jewish history – and take
a lesson, perhaps, from the Israeli historians who tell the truth
about the savagery which attended Israel’s birth.

As for the West’s reaction to Ahmadinajad’s antics, Lord Blair of Kut
al-Amara was "shocked" into disbelief while Israeli Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert responded with more eloquent contempt. Strangely, no one
recalled that, the holocaust deniers of recent years – deniers of the
Turkish genocide of 1.5 million Armenian Christians in 1915, that is –
include Lord Blair, who originally tried to prevent Armenians from
participating in Britain’s Holocaust Day and the then Israeli foreign
minister, Shimon Peres, who told Turks that their massacre of the
victims of the 20th century’s first Holocaust did not constitute a
genocide.

I’ve no doubt Ahmadinajad – equally conscious of Iran’s precious
relationship with Turkey – would gutlessly fail to honour the Armenian
Holocaust in Tehran. Who would have thought that the governments of
Britain, Israel andIran had so much in common?

Oh how – when it comes to the realities of history – the Muslims of
the Middle East exhaust my patience. After years of explaining to Arab
friends that the Jewish Holocaust – the systematic, planned murder of
six million Jews by the Nazis, is an indisputable fact – I am still
met with a state of willing disbelief.

And now, this week, the preposterous President Mahmoud Ahmadinajad of
Iran opens up his own country to obloquy and shame by holding a
supposedly impartial "conference" on the Jewish Holocaust to repeat
the lies of the racists who, if they did not direct their hatred
towards Jews, would most assuredly turn venomously against those other
Semites, the Arabs of the Middle East.

How, I always ask, can you expect the West to understand and accept
the ethnic cleansing of 750,000 men, women and children from Palestine
in 1948 when you will not try to comprehend the enormity done the Jews
of Europe? And, here, of course, is the wretched irony of the whole
affair. For what the Muslims of the Middle East should be doing is
pointing out to the world that they were not responsible for the
Jewish Holocaust, that, horrific and evil though it was, it is a
shameful, outrageous injustice that they, the Palestinians, should
suffer for something they had no part in and – even more disgusting-
that they should be treated as if they have. But, no, Ahmadinajad has
neither the brains nor the honesty to grasp this simple, vital
equation.

True, the Palestinian Grand Mufti of Jerusalem shook hands with
Hitler. I met his only surviving wartime Palestinian comrade before he
died and it is perfectly true that the intemperate, devious Had
al-Husseini made some vile anti-Jewish wartime speeches in German, in
one of which he advised the Nazis to close Jewish refugee exit routes
to Palestine and deport Jews eastwards (why east, I wonder?) and
helped to raise a Muslim SS unit in Bosnia. I have copies of his
speeches and his photograph hangs in the Yad Vashem Museum. But the
downtrodden, crushed, occupied, slaughtered Palestinians of our time –
of Sabra and Chatila, of Jenin and Beit Yanoun – were not even alive
in the Second World War.

Yet it is to the eternal shame of Israel and its leaders that they
should pretend as if the Palestinians were participants in the Second
World War. When the Israeli army was advancing on Beirut in 1982, the
then Israeli prime minister, Menachem Begin, wrote a crazed letter to
US president, Ronald Reagan, explaining that he felt he was marching
on "Berlin" to liquidate "Hitler" (ie Yasser Arafat, who was busy
comparing his own guerrillas to the defenders of Stalingrad).

That courageous Israeli writer Uri Avneri wrote an open letter to
Begin. "Mr Prime Minister," he began, "Hitler is dead." But this did
not stop Ariel Sharon from trying the same trick in 1989. By talking
to the US State Department, Arafat was "like Hitler, who also wanted
so much to negotiate with the Allies in the second half of the Second
World War", Sharon told the Wall Street Journal. "… Arafat is the
same kind of enemy."

Needless to say, any comparison between the behaviour of German troops
in the Second World War and Israeli soldiers today (with their
constantly betrayed claim to "purity of arms") is denounced as
anti-Semitic. Generally, I believe that is the correct
reaction. Israelis are not committing mass rape, murder or installing
gas chambers for the Palestinians.

But the acts of Israeli troops are not always so easy to divorce from
such insane parallels. During the Sabra and Chatila massacres – when
Israel sentits enraged Lebanese Christian Phalangist militias into the
camps after telling them that Palestinians had killed their beloved
leader – up to 1,700 Palestinians were slaughtered. Israeli troops
watched – and did nothing.

The Israeli novelist A B Yehoshua observed that, even if his country’s
soldiers had not known what was happening, "then this would be the
same lack of knowledge of the Germans who stood outside Buchenwald and
Treblinka and didnot know what was happening".

After the killings of Jenin, an Israeli officer suggested to his men,
according to the Israeli press, that, with close quarter fighting,
they might study the tactics of Nazi troops in Warsaw in 1944.

And I have to say – indeed, it needs to be said – that, after the
countless Lebanese civilian refugees ruthlessly cut down on the roads
of Lebanon by the Israeli air force in 1978, 1982, 1993, 1996 and
again this summer, how can one avoid being reminded of the Luftwaffe
attacks on the equally helpless French refugees of 1940? Many
thousands of Lebanese have been killed in this way over the past 25
years.

And please spare me the nonsense about "human shields". What about the
marked ambulance of women and children rocketed by a low-flying
Israeli helicopter in 1996? Or the refugee convoy whose women and
children were torn to pieces by an equally low-flying Israeli air
force helicopter as they fled along the roads after being ordered to
leave their homes by the Israelis?

No, Israelis are not Nazis. But it’s time we talked of war crimes
unless they stop these attacks on refugees. The Arabs are entitled to
talk the same way.

They should. But they must stop lying about Jewish history – and take
a lesson, perhaps, from the Israeli historians who tell the truth
about the savagery which attended Israel’s birth.

As for the West’s reaction to Ahmadinajad’s antics, Lord Blair of Kut
al-Amara was "shocked" into disbelief while Israeli Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert responded with more eloquent contempt. Strangely, no one
recalled that, the holocaust deniers of recent years – deniers of the
Turkish genocide of 1.5 million Armenian Christians in 1915, that is –
include Lord Blair, who originally tried to prevent Armenians from
participating in Britain’s Holocaust Day and the then Israeli foreign
minister, Shimon Peres, who told Turks that their massacre of the
victims of the 20th century’s first Holocaust did not constitute a
genocide.

I’ve no doubt Ahmadinajad – equally conscious of Iran’s precious
relationship with Turkey – would gutlessly fail to honour the Armenian
Holocaust in Tehran. Who would have thought that the governments of
Britain, Israel andIran had so much in common?

© 2006 Independent News and Media Limited

NATO Took Correct Stance of Non-Intervention in Karabakh Issue

PanARMENIAN.Net

NATO Took Correct Stance of Non-Intervention in Karabakh Issue
15.12.2006 18:30 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ NATO’s feedback on the constitutional referendum in
Karabakh is most admissible for Armenia, Defense Minister Serge
Sargsyan said at the sitting of interdepartmental commission on
coordination of elaboration of the National Security Strategy. `I
think that the Alliance leadership adheres to the most correct
position of non-intervention in the processes developing in Karabakh,’
the Minister said.

According to him, the Nagorno Karabakh conflict settlement process is
under the OSCE jurisdiction and all other comments on the issue are
inappropriate. `Some forces keep on confusing the constitutional
referendum with the referendum on independence. If the adoption of
Nagorno Karabakh’s Constitution is disagreeable for someone it’s quite
another problem,’ Serge Sargsyan said, reports newsarmenia.ru.

BAKU: Last Echelon Withdrawn From Tbilisi Garrison To Be Sent To Arm

LAST ECHELON WITHDRAWN FROM TBILISI GARRISON TO BE SENT TO ARMENIA

Today, Azerbaijan
Dec 14 2006

The last echelon withdrawn from the Russian base in Tbilisi garrison
will be sent to 102nd military base in Armenia.

North Caucasus region commander of Russia general Alexander Baranov
said that the echelon composed of 8 close and 16 open wagons are loaded
with Russian weapons and military equipment and property of 350 tons.

Motorcade composed of Russian military supplies will leave Tbilisi for
Armenia tomorrow. So, the process of withdrawal of Russian military
bases from Georgia will be completed.

Azerbaijan State Railway told that the transport of weapons and
military supplies through Azerbaijan has been completed.

No echelon loaded with military supplies is expected to be sent to
Russia through Azerbaijan for the present.

The withdrawal of Russian weapons and military equipment from Georgia
started in May last year.

20 echelons composed of 400 wagons carrying weapons and military
equipment withdrawn from military bases in Akhalkalak and Batumi
were sent during the first stage in May-July and 4 echelons were sent
during the second stage in November-December, APA reports.

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/politics/33874.html

Last Echelon With Russian Armament Left Tbilisi

LAST ECHELON WITH RUSSIAN ARMAMENT LEFT TBILISI

PanARMENIAN.Net
14.12.2006 12:59 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The withdrawal of Tbilisi Russian garrison is already
completed. Today in the morning from Vaziani (a suburb in Tbilisi)
the 2nd and last echelon with the property and equipment of Tbilisi
garrison of Russian armed forces made for Armenia, to the Russian
military base in Gyumri. The first such echelon headed for Armenia
on November 16, 2006. On November 23 and December 1 two echelons
withdrew the part of Tbilisi garrison property and equipment through
Azerbaijan to Russia. The personnel will be remove on trucks next week,
reports ITAR-TASS.

It is worth mentioning that on Russian Defense Ministry decision the
Tbilisi garrison is being removed ahead of schedule because of rapid
worsening of Russian-Georgian relations. Only a small executive group
will remain in Georgia from Group of Russian Forces in Caucasus. It
will be placed in one of Russian bases in Akhalkalaki or Batumi. These
two bases according to the Georgian-Russian agreement on May 30,
2005 will be withdrawn till the end of 2008.