Fri., 18.03.1433 Hjr / 10.02.2012, 04:55 Emirate time РусскийEnglishtürkçeУкраїнськийعربي

main

mirrors

add. formats
Google
Kavkaz-Center
WWW
Our button

News feeds
 
RussiaEvents Also in this section

Russia deports Georgian nationals

Publication time: 7 October 2006, 11:01

Russia deported at least 150 Georgian nationals from Moscow on Friday, according to officials, as relations worsen between the two countries. Nato Chikovani, a spokeswoman for the Georgian foreign ministry, said: "A special plane will land at Tbilisi airport with about 200 Georgian citizens expelled from Russia."

 

A Russian law enforcement official was quoted by ITAR-TASS news agency as saying that 136 Georgians have been expelled, explaining that the immigrants had been detained over a period of several months.

 

Georgia angered Moscow by arresting four Russian army officers last week on spying charges. The men were later released, but Russia still seeks to bring its southern neighbour to heel.

 

Russia has cut transport and postal links with Georgia and stopped issuing visas to Georgians. It has also banned major Georgian exports to Russia and raided Georgian businesses in Moscow.

Friday's deportations followed an order given on Wednesday by Vladimir Putin, Russia's president, to tighten controls on illegal migrants.

 

Up to a million Georgians live and work in Russia, and their earnings are important to Georgia's economy.

 

A deputy head of the education department in the Moscow government confirmed media reports that police had contacted schools to look for Georgian children whose parents might be illegal immigrants.

 

Mikhail Saakashvili, president of Georgia, has dismissed the economic sanctions, pledging to continue his drive for Nato membership.

 

Saakashvili received an extra boost on Friday as early returns from local elections in Georgia indicated that he had won a convincing victory over the opposition.

 

But the rising tension between Georgia and Russia has alarmed Europe and the United States.

 

Diplomats fear that the problem could spiral out of control, leading to the risk of armed clashes in Abkhazia and South Ossetia, two regions that broke free from Georgian control in the early 1990s and favour closer links with Russia.

 

Yuri Chaika, Russia's prosecutor-general, said that all the actions were "being carried out within the framework of the law", but selective law enforcement is a long-standing Kremlin tactic used against opponents.

 

"An aggressive anti-Georgian hysteria is gaining momentum," wrote Demis Polandov, a liberal commentator, in the daily Gazeta.

 

"Like dogs that have broken loose, Russian bureaucrats of all ranks have rushed to fight a new 'criminal nationality'. Searches in restaurants, the closure of casinos, the threat of deportation hanging over hundreds of thousands of people - if this is not ethnic cleansing, then I do not know what it is."

 

Reuters

Racist Russian Police Spies On Chidren

 

In a chilling part of an escalating campaign against Georgia, Moscow police have asked schools to provide lists of schoolchildren with Georgian surnames in a bid to root out "illegal migrants", a Russian municipal official said today.

 

Russian authorities, meanwhile, deported nearly 140 Georgian citizens on a plane from Moscow after detaining them as purportedly "illegal migrants", without due court hearings as in the civilized world.

KC

Related articles:

SWEDEN. Chechen refugee released from police custody
Russian-sponsored deadly assault continues on Syria's Homs
RUSSIAN SPRING. Putin afraid of being toppled by West
Committee for US International Broadcasting accuses VOA and RFE/RL of working for the KGB
Putin is already dead
Russians hands over to Alawite regime list of targets for murder of Muslims
Besieged Homs endures Russian tank assault
Delegation of Austrian Parliament secretly meets with Kadyrov for coordination of 'return' of refugees
U.S. ambassador in Moscow accuses KGB TV channel Russia Today of lying
WHITE REVOLUTION. Ice cracks under Putin
RUSSIAN THREAT. Russia threatens Qatar to wipe this country off the map
Protest against Belgium's attempt to extradite former Ichkeria's soldier to Russia held in Helsinki
Putin did not like CE Emir Dokku Abu Usman's statement
Assad's regime in Syria steps up assault on Homs
Belgium ready to deport Chechen war hero for death in Russia
Syrian opposition threatens Russia with Jihad and expulsion of Russian thugs
Sweden continues to block information about arrested Chechen war hero
Syrian Alawite army steps up genocide of Muslims in Homs
Senator McCain warns bloody Russian dog Putin saying thug's days numbered
Mass arrests of Muslim youth in Kazakhstan
RUSSIAN SPRING. Russia's liberal intelligentsia begins to stir
Kadyrov’s espionage and terrorist network leader of Russian KGB, nicknamed Karamazov, deported from Austria
Protesters continue to battle police in Egypt
AUSTRIA. Chechen family to be deported to Russia, where it is threatened with persecution
WHITE REVOLUTION. This is serious message for Putin and his regime