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Georgia: For One Family, Threatened Sanctions Could Hit Hard

posted by zaina19 on October, 2006 as Imperialism


From: MSN NicknameEagle_wng  (Original Message)    Sent: 10/4/2006 11:23 AM
Wednesday, October 4, 2006

Georgia: For One Family, Threatened Sanctions Could Hit Hard

By Jimsher Rekhviashvili

Russia -- A notice at Moscow’s Paveletsky railway-station reads that rail service to Georgia is to be suspended starting from October 4, 03Oct2006
A notice at Moscow's Paveletsky railway station informs passengers that service to Georgia has been suspended as of October 4
(TASS)
TBILISI, October 4, 2006 (RFE/RL) -- Moscow says its decision to block all transportation and postal links between Russia and Georgia is directed at the Georgian leadership. But it is ordinary Georgians who are likely to suffer the most.





Russia has imposed the blockade despite Tbilisi's release of four Russian military officers arrested on September 27 on spying charges.

Sending Money Home

Neither the Georgian nor the Russian government has exact statistics on the number of Georgians living -- legally or illegally -- in Russia. Estimates range from 400,000 to 1 million people.

However, Georgia's Central Bank has provided one measure of the impact its citizens living in Russia have on Georgia's economy. The bank estimates they transferred $220 million from Russia to Georgia in the first half of 2006 -- accounting for nearly 15 percent of Georgia's GDP.
"Most of us in Zugdidi, we survive on sums of money that are sent to us from other countries, or Russia," Chachibaia says.


Lado Kvikvinia, a 48-year-old engineer, moved to Moscow in 1994 to seek a better life. Four years ago, he received Russian citizenship.

Kvikvinia says that when he left Georgia, people in his profession were experiencing severe difficulties.

"It was impossible to find work," Kvikvinia said. "You are well aware that it is only now that they started building things in Georgia. Before, they were only destroying. In any case, I was unable to find any work."

Kvikvinia says he found that the high level of competition meant it was not easy to find work in Moscow either. However, his degree from the Polytechnic Institute of Tbilisi worked to his advantage, and he is a district head for a construction company.

His earnings in Russia aren't much, he says. But they allow him to support his immediate family of three in Moscow and to send some to his sister living in the Georgian city of Zugdidi.

"You can only send so much money from here," Kvikvinia says. "It's around $1,000 a year. On average, $100 a month -- more or less."

Hard Times In Zugdidi

Kvikvinia's nephew, 20-year-old Ilia Chachibaia, says his family is able to survive thanks to the money his uncle sends from Russia. The income Chachibaia brings in from his work as a street vendor is too small to maintain a decent living, but he says it is impossible for him to find other work in Zugdidi.

"There is great poverty in Zugdidi, with no job opportunities at all," Chachibaia says. "There are many people who don't even have money for food. The price of hazelnuts has decreased, and this has severely affected people's lives. Nuts and tangerines were the main source of income. Now these products have become cheaper, and people are facing financial problems."

Zugdidi inhabitants are alarmed by the financial restrictions being threatened by Russia, where lawmakers are due to discuss legislation that would prohibit money transfers between the two countries.

Worried About The Future

Chachibaia says people are afraid such measures will prevent them from receiving much-needed supplemental funds from relatives and friends living in Russia.

"Most of us in Zugdidi, we survive on sums of money that are sent to us from other countries, or Russia," Chachibaia says. "Many worried people went to the bank today. They are panicking, for they can't receive money like they always have from Moscow."

An empty railway platform in Tbilisi on October 3 as service to Russia stopped (epa)Chachibaia's uncle abroad has tried to assuage his concerns. Kvikvinia tells his nephew that increased expenditures will be the only real hurdle faced by ordinary Georgians.

"It will always be possible to send money," Kvikvinia says. "It's just that before I had to pay 1.5 percent of the amount I was sending. There are other channels for international money transfers, which have high rates. So this will only affect my pocket. It is absolutely impossible that Russia will ban Western Union from transferring money, or will forbid money transfers to Georgia but allow them to Armenia, for example. The same thing applies to travel. It won't be a big problem not to have transport going from here. You can take a train, and be in Minsk the following morning. From there, you can fly without problems. It's just that the ticket price is twice as much."

Despite anticipating increased costs, Kvikvinia has no intention of stopping his monthly financial contributions to his extended family in Georgia.

Although Kvikvinia and other Georgians living in Russia worry that this is just the beginning and that relations between the two countries could deteriorate further.
http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2006/10/16be2831-636b-4079-818a-cbe05b5b4275.html

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