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This Article is From Nov 25, 2014

Vladimir Putin Sparks Georgia Fury With 'Annexation' Deal in Rebel Region

Vladimir Putin Sparks Georgia Fury With 'Annexation' Deal in Rebel Region
Moscow, Russia: Russia cemented control over neighbouring Georgia's rebel Abkhazia region Monday with a "strategic partnership" deal that the Georgian government said amounts to annexation.

President Vladimir Putin signed the "alliance and strategic partnership" agreement which formalises Russian dominance of the tiny separatist region's foreign policy, armed forces and economy, as well as placing Russian guards on the border with the rest of Georgia.

The Georgian government condemned the move as illegal.

The signature "is a step towards a de facto annexation of the Abkhazia region by the Russian Federation" and a "violation of the principles of Georgia's territorial integrity and international law," Georgian Foreign Minister Tamar Beruchashvili told journalists.

More than 30,000 opposition supporters protested in Tbilisi this month against the planned deal, which comes amid a diplomatic firestorm over Russia's involvement in a separatist uprising in eastern Ukraine and annexation of Crimea last March.

Abkhaz opposition parties have also voiced fears that the agreement undermines their tiny would-be country's bid for real independence.

Some provisions of the agreement "may have undesirable consequences for the sovereignty" of Abkhazia, the Council of Abkhazia's Public Chamber said on Friday.

The deal that Putin signed after talks with Abkhaz President Raul Khajimba in the Black Sea resort of Sochi says Moscow and Sukhumi will unite armed forces and jointly guard Abkhazia's border with Georgia.

It also creates a shared law enforcement system and a common economic and customs space.

The agreement, which says it is prompted by "new global and regional challenges and threats," specifies that any attack against Abkhazia will be viewed as aggression against Russia, which will provide military aid.

Putin also said that Russia would give Abkhazia five billion rubles ($111 million) in 2015.

"We have set new tasks and long-range goals. They are backed up with serious financing," Putin said, quoted by Interfax news agency.

The European Union and NATO both said the agreement violated Georgia's sovereignty and territorial integrity and went against international law.

The signing of the agreement was "detrimental to ongoing efforts to stabilise the security situation in the region," EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini said in a statement.

"We do not recognise the so-called treaty," NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said in a statement, adding that it "does not contribute to a peaceful and lasting settlement of the situation in Georgia".

Abkhazia broke away from Georgia following a civil war in the 1990s. The war between Moscow-backed separatists and Tbilisi forced some 250,000 residents to flee their homes, most of them ethnic Georgians.

Russian troops are stationed in the region and it is heavily dependent on Russian aid.

Russia officially recognised Abkhazia's independence along with that of fellow breakaway region of South Ossetia after a five-day war with Georgia in 2008.

But only a handful of other countries recognise the regions' independence.

Abkhazia is a lush sun-drenched coastal strip wedged between the Black Sea and the Caucasus mountains that is still visited by Russian holidaymakers.

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