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Georgia's FM says talks with Russian counterpart fruitful

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Georgian Foreign Minister Gela Bezhuashvili said Wednesday his talks with the Russian foreign minister were positive, although he did not provide any information on concrete results.
MOSCOW, October 1 (RIA Novosti) - Georgian Foreign Minister Gela Bezhuashvili said Wednesday his talks with the Russian foreign minister were positive, although he did not provide any information on concrete results.

"The meeting [with Sergei Lavrov] was fruitful," he said, adding that [given recent tensions] any meeting could be called an improvement in relations.

Bezhuashvili, who is in Moscow for a two-day session of an economic alliance of Black Sea countries, earlier said that one of the objectives of his visit to Moscow was to discuss the resumption of a full-fledged dialogue between the two countries, which are locked in a diplomatic standoff.

The ongoing diplomatic feud began when Georgia briefly arrested four Russian officers on espionage charges in late September. Russia subsequently suspended transport and mail links with the Caucasus state, cracked down on businesses allegedly related to the Georgian mafia in the country, and deported hundreds of Georgians accused of residing in Russia illegally.

Before the current crisis, relations between Russia and its small mountainous neighbor were already strained. The Georgian leadership accuses Russia of backing separatists in Abkhazia and South Ossetia, where Russian troops have been stationed since bloody conflicts in the 1990s.

Russia has, in turn, warned the world that Georgia's openly bellicose statements with respect to the self-proclaimed republics and moves to build up its army can lead to a new wave of violence in the region.

Bezhuashvili said he did not discuss the possibility of a meeting between the Georgian and Russian presidents during the summit of the leaders of the CIS, a loose union of former Soviet republics, which will take place in Minsk, the capital of Belarus, in late November.

"Such contacts could be possible in Minsk without our participation," he said.

The sharp deterioration of relations between the two ex-Soviet neighbors has led several countries, including the U.S., to urge them to calm the situation and prevent tensions from spiraling out of control.

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