Switzerland and Georgia are preparing to step up their economic relations with a number of new treaties, the Swiss foreign minister announced on Monday.
This content was published on
1 minute
The treaties will cover the legal framework for increased trade relations and Swiss direct investments, Micheline Calmy-Rey told journalists after a meeting with her Georgian counterpart Grigol Vashadze.
The treaties should be ready for signing next year, she said.
Relations between the two countries had grown stronger in the aftermath of the war between Russia and Georgia in August 2008, when Switzerland began acting as an “information channel” between the two, she added.
Since the conflict Georgia and Russia have suspended diplomatic relations: instead Switzerland represents the interests of each country in the other’s capital.
Vashadze thanked Switzerland for its good offices, and also for its technical, humanitarian and financial help.
swissinfo.ch and agencies
Most Read Swiss Abroad
More
In Switzerland, New Year brings ‘burka ban’ and pension hikes
Have you heard something about Swiss diplomacy that you’d like us to fact check?
Not all information circulating about Switzerland’s foreign relations is accurate or well understood. Tell us what you'd like us to fact check or clarify.
If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.
Read more
More
Swiss calls for more security in Georgia
This content was published on
Swiss law professor Walter Kälin, who has just returned from a four-day trip to Georgia, told swissinfo that while he was “cautiously optimistic” about people returning home, the ongoing militia violence and looting in the buffer zones were “inacceptable”. On Monday Russian forces stepped up preparations to withdraw from bases and checkpoints surrounding two separatist…
This content was published on
Jeronim Perovic, a senior researcher at Basel University, told swissinfo that the message was aimed not only at Georgia, but also at its western allies. The long simmering conflict burst into open fighting on Thursday, when Georgia sent forces into South Ossetia and reached the capital, Tskinvali, in order to re-impose its authority. Russia responded…
This content was published on
War and peace, work and leisure, rich and poor, expected and unexpected: regular contacts between Switzerland and Russia go back to the 18th century.
You can find an overview of ongoing debates with our journalists here . Please join us!
If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.