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Kremlin announces South Ossetia will join 'one united Russian state'

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  • Kremlin announces South Ossetia will join 'one united Russian state'

    Kremlin announces that South Ossetia will join 'one united Russian state'

    The Times
    August 30, 2008


    Tony Halpin in Moscow

    The Kremlin moved swiftly to tighten its grip on Georgia's breakaway
    regions yesterday as South Ossetia announced that it would soon become
    part of Russia, which will open military bases in the province under an
    agreement to be signed on Tuesday.

    Tarzan Kokoity, the province's Deputy Speaker of parliament, announced
    that South Ossetia would be absorbed into Russia soon so that its
    people could live in `one united Russian state' with their ethnic kin
    in North Ossetia.

    The declaration came only three days after Russia defied international
    criticism and recognised South Ossetia and Georgia's other separatist
    region of Abkhazia as independent states. Eduard Kokoity, South
    Ossetia's leader, agreed that it would form part of Russia within
    `several years' during talks with Dmitri Medvedev, the Russian
    President, in Moscow.

    The disclosure will expose Russia to accusations that it is annexing
    land regarded internationally as part of Georgia. Until now, the
    Kremlin has insisted that its troops intervened solely to protect South
    Ossetia and Abkhazia from Georgian `aggression'.

    Interfax news quoted an unidentified Russian official as saying that
    Moscow also planned to establish two bases in Abkhazia. Sergei Shamba,
    Abkhazia's Foreign
    Minister, said that an agreement on military
    co-operation would be signed within a month.

    The Russian Foreign Ministry confirmed that agreements on `peace,
    co-operation and mutual assistance with Abkhazia and South Ossetia'
    were being prepared on the orders of President Medvedev. Abkhazia said
    that it would ask Russia to represent its interests abroad.

    Georgia announced that it was recalling all diplomatic staff from its
    embassy in Moscow in protest at the continued Russian occupation of its
    land in defiance of a ceasefire agreement brokered by President Sarkozy
    of France. The parliament in Tbilisi declared Abkhazia and South
    Ossetia to be under Russian occupation.

    Gigi Tsereteli, the Vice-Speaker, dismissed the threat of South Ossetia
    becoming part of Russia, saying: `The world has already become
    different and Russia will not long be able to occupy sovereign Georgian
    territory.

    `The regimes of Abkhazia and South Ossetia should think about the fact
    that if they become part of Russia, they will be assimilated, and in
    this way they will disappear.'

    Lado Gurgenidze, the Prime Minister of Georgia, scrapped agreements
    that had permitted Russian peacekeepers to operate in the two regions
    after wars in the early 1990s. He called for their replacement by
    international troops.

    Vyacheslav Kovalenko, Moscow's Ambassador to Georgia, described
    Tbilisi's decision to sever relations as `a st
    ep towards further
    escalation of tensions with Russia and the desire to drive the
    situation into an even worse deadlock'.

    Russia attacked the G7 after the United States, Britain, France,
    Germany, Italy, Canada and Japan condemned its `excessive use of
    military force in Georgia'. In a joint statement, they had called on
    Russia to `implement in full' the French ceasefire agreement.

    The Foreign Ministry said that the G7 was `justifying Georgian acts of
    aggression' and insisted that Moscow had met its obligations under the
    six-point agreement.

    Having been rebuffed on Thursday by China and four Central Asian
    states, Russia will seek support next week from the Collective Security
    Treaty Organisation (CSTO) for its recognition of Abkhazia and South
    Ossetia. The CSTO comprises Russia and the former Soviet republics of
    Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan.

    The signing of the military agreement with South Ossetia will take
    place the day after an emergency summit of European Union leaders to
    discuss the crisis. The French presidency of the EU said that sanctions
    against Russia were not being considered, contradicting an earlier
    statement by Bernard Kouchner, the Foreign Minister.

    Russia told the EU that any sanctions would be damaging to both sides.
    Andrei Nesterenko, a Foreign Ministry official, said: `We hope that
    common sense will prevail over emotions and
    that EU leaders will find
    the strength to reject a one-sided assessment of the conflict . . .
    Neither party needs the confrontation towards which some countries are
    being energetically pushed by the EU.'

    Russia also lashed out at Nato, saying that it had `no moral right' to
    pass judgment on the recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. The
    Foreign Ministry said: `Further sliding to confrontation with Russia
    and attempts to put pressure on us are unacceptable, as they can entail
    irreversible consequences in the military-political climate and in
    stability on the continent.'

    The US confirmed that the flagship of its Sixth Fleet, the USS Mount
    Whitney, would deliver aid to Georgia next week. Two other warships are
    moored off Georgia's Black Sea port of Batumi, and Russia has ordered
    its fleet to take `precautionary measures'.

    Mr Medvedev has accused the US of shipping weapons to Georgia along
    with aid, a claim dismissed as `ridiculous' by the White House.
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