The Russian delegation has left
UN General Assembly room during the speech of
Mikhail Saakashvili,
President of Georgia. The anti-Russian character of the
Georgian president's speech at the UN General Assembly forced the
Russian delegation leave the room, Russian UN envoy
Vitaly Churkin said.
President Saakashvili went on to rail against Russian national interests, casting the Kremlin as an empire that does not want
peace between its neighbors.
"
Russian Federation has no interest in having stable states around it. Neighboring countries in constant turmoil is what the Kremlin is seeking," the
Georgian leader said, adding "an old
Empire is trying to reclaim its bygone borders. And 'borders' is actually not the right word, since this Empire - be it the
Russian Empire, the
Soviet Union, the Russian Federation, or the
Eurasian Union - never had borders. It only had margins."
Saakashvili accused
Russia of occupying the parts of
Georgia -
South Ossetia and Abkhazia following the 2008 war with Georgia.
"Do you think
the Kremlin would agree to discuss the de-occupation of
Abkhazia and
South Ossetia, now that the government has changed in
Tbilisi?
Far from it! The annexation of Georgian lands by Russian troops continues," he told the UN General Assembly.
Saakashvili moved
on to accuse Russia of dividing age-old communities.
"The Russian military keeps advancing its positions, dividing communities with new barbwires, threatening our economy, moving towards the vital
Baku-Supsa pipeline, approaching more and more the main highway of Georgia and thus putting into question the very sustainability of our country."
The Georgian President also attacked the prospect of establishing the Eurasian Union by
2015, a political and economic alliance of post-Soviet
States.
"The Eurasian Union is both our recent past and the future shaped for us by some ex-KGB officers in
Moscow."
Even the
Russian orthodox church became a target during the Georgian leader's address.
"When we hear the fake music of the orthodox brotherhood sung by Russian imperialists, can't we hear the true voice of the Patriarch Kirion who was assassinated or the eternal voice of the Patriarch Ambrosi Khelaya who was tortured during days and weeks only because he appealed to the
Geneva Conference against the invasion of his country? Are we so deaf as not to hear the voices of the killed bishops and priests? Are we so uneducated that we do not recall who has repainted our churches and erased our sacred frescos?"
Saakashvili then went on to his predictions for the future of the
Russian President. "Few years from now,
Vladimir Putin will have left the Kremlin and vanished from the
Russian politics.
Russian citizens will remember him as a ghost from the old times, the times of the Empire - the times of corruption and oppression."
- published: 27 Sep 2013
- views: 14777