Nu ar fi de mirare ca aceasta miscare a Rusiei sa fie un gest de 
pedepsire a Moldovei si Georgiei, ambele incercind independenta fata 
de Moscova. De fapt e clar ca Moscova joaca grosolan, incepind cu 
presiunile asupra Ucrainei cu inchiderea gazului.

Rusia nu se dezice de traditia mostenita din tzar in tzar de a da cu 
pumnul in alte state mai mici. Din pacate pentru Rusia, aceste metode 
brutale, chiar si economice, nu se uita usor de alte state. Sa vedem 
mai tirziu daca cocosul va mai cinta pe gardul Kremlinului, chiar si 
cu zdranganeala la balalaika si o vodca mare.

FR

Russian wine move draws protests 
Moldova and Georgia have defended the quality of their wines in 
response to a Russian move to suspend imports on health and 
sanitation grounds. 
The head of Russia's consumer rights watchdog, Gennady Onishchenko, 
called this week for imports to be suspended. 

As rail deliveries ground to a halt, Moldova sent a state delegation 
to Moscow to express its indignation. 

Georgia invited Russian experts to test its wines at source while 
observers suggested the row was political. 

Some believe it is another attempt by Russia to punish ex-Soviet 
states for severing ties with Moscow, the BBC's Chloe Arnold reports 
from Moscow. 

Georgia's Western-leaning government has turned its back on Russia, 
and relations between Moldova and Moscow have soured over the 
breakaway, Russian-dominated region of Trans-Dniester. 

Russia recently doubled the price Georgia and Moldova must pay for 
gas imports while subsidising energy supplies to countries like 
Belarus, which remain loyal to the Kremlin, our correspondent says. 

'Pesticide traces' 

Mr Onishchenko wrote to the Russian customs service asking it to stop 
wine imports from the two countries after tests this month "revealed 
a large share of samples of alcohol products and wine materials that 
do not meet safety requirements". 


 There are companies that sell 90 or even 100% of their wine to 
Russia - for them, this means ruin 
Archil Gegenava 
Georgian wine plant director  

Traces of potentially dangerous pesticides had, he said, been 
discovered. 

Our correspondent says that both Moldova and Georgia send as much as 
80% of their wine exports to Russia and the ban could cripple the 
countries' economies. 

Valeriu Mironescu, a member of the Moldovan delegation sent to 
Moscow, told Moldovan TV it was seeking to meet Russian officials to 
clarify what he called a "misunderstanding". 

Georgia's agriculture ministry has said the Russian concerns are 
unfounded and it invited Moscow to attend laboratory tests on the 
spot. 

Archil Gegenava, director of the Teliani Veli wine plant in Georgia, 
said some companies faced ruin. 

"Russia accounts for 89% of Georgian [wine] exports," he told 
Georgia's Imedi TV channel. 

"There are companies that sell 90 or even 100% of their wine to 
Russia - for them, this means ruin." 

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/europe/4860454.stm

Published: 2006/03/30 12:03:01 GMT









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