![]() |
|||
Russia said it cut air, sea, land and railway links, and postal communication with Georgia starting from October 3, despite Tbilisi's move to hand over four Russian military officers charged for spying. Two Russian companies – Aeroflot and Sibir – also operate flights between Tbilisi and Moscow. About 25 flights total are conducted by the five companies each week between the two capitals. In addition, Boris Grizlov, the Chairman of Russia’s lower house of Parliament, Duma Council, said on October 2 that a draft law will be developed authorizing the government to ban money transfers from Russia into Georgia. Hundreds of thousands of Georgians working in Russia regularly send money back to their families in Georgia. According to the Georgian National Bank, the largest share (67.5%) of foreign money transfers to Georgia is made from Russia, which reached USD 219 million in the period between January-August of 2006. “They have nothing more to cut. They have already cut everything a long time ago… If you are talking about three, or four flights that come here a week [from Moscow], we have much more flights to Europe, to Ukraine, to other places,” Saakashvili said. “We are not scared, but we are not surprised [by this move by Russia]… One should not overestimate this pressure,” he added. “We are planning very concrete measures to counter any possible sanctions related with financial transfers, or transport communication,” Irakli Chogovadze, the Georgian Economy Minister, said on October 2. OSCE Chairman-in-Office, Belgian Foreign Minister Karel De Gucht, who visited Tbilisi on October 2 and helped to solve spy row with Russia, said that embargos will not help to solve tensions. “Isolation is not an answer to the situation and I think that it is very important that swiftly the air traffic should be restored; also land borders should be reopened… We should resolve this conflict by talks. We should not do that by retaliation,” Karel De Gucht said. |
|||
![]() |
Civil.Ge © 2001-2025