British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said during his visit in Tbilisi on March 30 that Georgia is “regional democratic role model” and this reputation should be safeguarded especially in the view of upcoming parliamentary elections in October; he also called to continue progress in reforms “to enable an environment for free and fair elections.” Accompanied by the Georgian PM and Energy Minister, the British Foreign Secretary also visited BP operated South Caucasus Pipeline expansion works, which are carried out as part of the Shah Deniz Stage 2 project aimed at bringing gas from Azerbaijan to Europe. Hammond said that the expansion of the South Caucasus Pipeline, which currently delivers Azerbaijani gas to Georgia and Turkey, is an “excellent example of the UK’s commitment to Georgia and the region and of its confidence in Georgia and Azerbaijan as commercial partners.”
Speaking at a joint news conference with Georgian PM Giorgi Kvirikashvili, Hammond said that the UK and Georgia “enjoy a long history of close bilateral relations.” He said that the UK continues to support “Georgia’s development of close relations and cooperation with NATO as it makes reforms that will bring it closer to the goal of membership.” He also said that the UK welcomes Georgia’s progress in achieving the goal of visa liberalisation, which should result in lifting of visa requirements for the Georgian citizens for short-term stay in the Schengen area; the UK is not part of the Schengen area. “I’d like to pay tribute to the Prime Minister, who I think has tried perhaps slightly a new approach of reaching out rather than seeking to resolve these conflicts in the traditional way – reaching out to the people in the breakaway regions, trying a process of dialogue, the twin-track – the process in Geneva, but also the process of outreach to your fellow countrymen in breakaway regions; this is a good and positive step forward and we look forward to seeing progress as a result of this initiative,” Hammond said. He said that Russia’s “unacceptable behavior in Ukraine is part of a wider pattern of lack of respect for the rules-based international system and the right of countries like Georgia to make their own independent sovereign choices about their futures.” Asked if Russia poses a threat to countries such as Georgia and the Baltic states, Hammond said: “Russia ignores the norms of international conduct and breaks the rules of the rules-based international system and that represents a challenge and a threat to all of us.” “What we all want is for Russia to play a constructive role in the international community. Russia has significant influence and it has significant power. It also shares many of our concerns; it shares our concern about Islamist terrorism. I have no doubt that Russia is sincere in its desire to defeat Daesh [Arabic acronym for the Islamic State group] in Iraq and Syria, but we need to work together on these things and we can only work in partnership with countries, which accept the international rules… We can’t be working in partnership with a country one day and find it is doing just exactly whatever it wants in flagrant breach of international norms and rules the next day. There has to be a way forward that respects the rules of the international system if we are going to be able to do business together,” Hammond said. Responding to the same question about Russia, PM Kvirikashvili said that as long as Russia continues occupation of Georgian territories “of course it will be a serious security challenge for Georgia.” PM Kvirikashvili also said that Georgia is not interested in tensions in the region; he said Georgia aims at staying “consistent” on its path towards NATO and the EU integration and to have a security to allow attract foreign investments. “Standing here in Tbilisi I am also all too aware that villages remain divided from their lands and pastures and from each other on either side of the administrative boundary line [with breakaway South Ossetia] just 40 kilometer away with new fences going up all the time. Ironic that I should be saying this at the time when of course, sadly, across Europe new fences are going up as well – but the erection of new fences and barriers take the region, and will take any region, backwards at the time when we should be trying to bring down barriers between countries,” Hammond said. |
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