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Estonia: bill supports Georgia's early accession to NATO

11.08.2008

TALLINN, Aug 11, BNS - The Estonian parliament at an extraordinary session on Tuesday will discuss a statement according to which the parliament supports Georgia's early accession to NATO.

According to the draft of the statement the Estonian parliament condemns the Russian military aggression against Georgia and expresses deep concern about its consequences. The draft says that the parliament welcomes and supports the demand of the international public and democratic countries to immediately cease hostilities and ensure Georgia's full territorial integrity.

The parliament underlines in its statement that restoration of peace in Georgia is only possible if the democratic world exerts united, powerful and consistent pressure with this purpose. "The aggressor must know that the attack against a sovereign country will bring international sanctions," says the draft filed by 37 members of parliament, according to which Russia must return to the principles of international cooperation and of international law.

Simultaneously the parliament draws attention to the fact that by justifying the needs of protecting its citizens Russia resorts to the same argument by which National Socialist Germany justified its attacks against the neighboring countries, Czechoslovakia and Poland and destruction of their independence. According to the draft, return to the use of such argumentation recreates a serious feeling of danger to peace throughout the world.

In the bill the Estonian parliament appeals to the United Nations, the European Union, the European Parliament, NATO, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), the Council of Europe and all democratic countries, particularly their parliaments, to give all-round assistance to Georgia in order to immediately stop the Russian military aggression and compensate the moral and material damage caused by the war. According to the bill, the parliament will make to the government a proposal to allocate humanitarian aid to Georgia to help mend its war damage.

According to the bill, the parliament expresses support to the application of new peacekeeping formats in Abkhazia and Southern Ossetia and appeals to the European Union to take part in them. According to the bill, the parliament does not regard it possible to continue talks between the European Union and Russia on cooperation and development if the aggression continues.

The initators of the bill said in the covering letter to the document that on August 8 Russia started extensive bombing of Georgia, in the course of which military sites, residential buildings and important infrastructure objects had been destoyed. "Such an aggression against a sovereign country is impermissible and demands immediate and resolute international interference," they said.

According to the covering letter the parliament sees with concern that a country that had made outstanding achievements in democracy and the construction of free economy had come under an unjustified attack. Such an attack, partly by the ominously expressed justification of protection of its citizens, is a security threat to the whole world.

The initiators of the bill indicated that Russia's conduct vis a vis of Georgia had been extremely provocative already before the beginning of immediate miliatry aggression. "If earlier Georgia's sovereignyy and territorial integrity was expressed at least in words, then one month before, admitting flights of threat over Georgia's territory, Russia dropped its pretences and started to prepare for an outright aggression," they said, adding that such a developmemt is the result of poor cooperation between democratic countries and insuffcient interference.

Motions of amendment can be made to the bill, which was introduced to the parliament on Monday, until noon on Tuesday.

Tallinn newsroom, +372 610 8810, sise@bns.ee

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