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  • Georgia Urges UN To Recognise Ethnic Cleansing Against Georgians In

    GEORGIA URGES UN TO RECOGNISE ETHNIC CLEANSING AGAINST GEORGIANS IN ABKHAZIA

    ITAR-TASS, Russia
    Oct 16 2007

    TBILISI, October 15 (Itar-Tass) -- Georgia will urge the United
    Nations to recognise ethnic cleansing against Georgians in Abkhazia
    in 1992-1993, Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili said on Monday.

    "It is very important" that the U.N. Security Council resolution on
    the on the Georgian-Abkhazian conflict adopted on Monday "for the
    first time states the unconditional right of all refuges to return to
    all parts of Abkhazia and specifies the mechanisms for their return,
    but we expect more from the United Nations", the president said.

    "We will insist that the United Nations not just engage in general
    discussions about several hundred residents of Abkhazia who had to
    leave their houses and land in 1992-1993 but recognise that it was
    ethnic cleansing with all ensuing legal acts and responsibility of
    all persons who committed this ethnic cleansing," Saakashvili said.

    He welcomed the resolution as a "diplomatic breakthrough" in the
    peaceful resolution of the conflict.

    "The resolution is a serious step in the peaceful resolution of the
    Abkhazian conflict," he said.

    In his view, "the most important aspect is that the resolution for the
    first time states the rights of refugees from the Abkhazian region
    to their property they had to leave in places of their permanent
    residence."

    "This means that the rights of refugees to their property are
    protected not only by Georgian laws but also by a U.N. Security
    Council resolution," he added.

    "From now on all those who infringe upon the property of refugees they
    left in the Abkhazian region will bear responsibility in accordance
    with international law," he warned.

    Saakashvili confirmed that Tbilisi favours "peaceful resolution of
    the Abkhazian conflict".

    "Georgian authorities will continue efforts towards a peaceful
    and political settlement of the conflict and restoration of their
    jurisdiction over the entire territory of the Abkhazian region,"
    the president said.

    Tbilisi has been controlling only one district in Abkhazia - the
    upper part of the Kodori Gorge -- since 1993.

    At the beginning of September, Saakashvili said the sale by Sukhumi
    authorities of Abkhazian refugees' property left during the armed
    conflict in 1992-1993 was unlawful.

    "The property left in Abkhazia by local residents who have become
    refugees belongs only to them. Any attempt to buy the land of flats
    of refugees is unlawful and will be annulled by Georgian authorities,"
    the president said.

    Prior to the 1992-1993 conflict, 525,000 people lived in Abkhazia,
    including 47 percent of Georgians, 18 percent of Abkhazians, and rest
    were Russians, Armenians, Greeks, Jews, etc.

    About 400,000 people left the Abkhazian region in 1993, including
    240,000 Georgians. Since the end of the 1990s, about 45,000 Georgian
    have spontaneously returned to the Gali district of Abkhazia. The
    other refugees are living in other parts of Georgia, Russia, Ukraine,
    Greece, Israel, and other countries.
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