Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Sarkozy negotiates Georgia issue

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Sarkozy negotiates Georgia issue

    Sunday Observer, Sri Lanka

    Sarkozy negotiates Georgia issue

    By Daily Mail Reporter

    Sunday, 17 August 2008

    Russia and EU president Nicolas Sarkozy have negotiated conditions for
    a ceasefire in Georgia, agreeing on a plan that calls for both Russian
    and Georgian troops to move back to their original positions.

    And Georgian president Saakashvili says he accepts the cease-fire
    plan.

    After several hours of talks French president Sarkozy said the EU
    could send peacekeepers to Georgia if all parties agreed to the plan.

    'Could Europe be involved in a peacekeeping mission? Europe is
    available to do that of course,' he said.The peace plan endorsed by
    Russian president Dmitri Medvedev and Sarkozy calls for an
    international discussion on the future status of Georgia's breakaway
    provinces and ways to ensure their security. It demands Russia and
    Georgia to immediately end all hostilities and allow free access to
    the region for humanitarian assistance.

    Medvedev said the residents of both breakaway provinces must be
    allowed to decide whether they want to be part of Russia.

    'Ossetians and Abkhaz must respond to that question taking their
    history into account, including what happened in the past few days,'
    Medvedev said.

    Sarkozy is now heading to Tbilisi to talk over the plan with Georgian
    president Saakashvili.

    Earlier today Russian forces shelled the Georgian town of Gori,
    despite a Kremlin promise to bring fighting to an end.

    As president Medvedev ordered a halt to the invasion, his army fired
    on the area in an escalation of the fighting that has raged for five
    days.

    Gori is a town of 70,000 people, lying 15 miles south of the disputed
    region of South Ossetia.


    Russian PM Vladimir Putin

    The attack appeared to be aimed at the town hall but flats were
    damaged.

    A Dutch journalist was killed and another wounded after a
    fragmentation shell exploded outside a press centre.

    Witnesses said one shell fell on a hospital, while journalists
    reported seeing dead and injured people lying in the streets.

    >From the Georgian capital Tbilisi, British citizens were evacuated in
    coaches to Armenia as Georgian troops took up positions to repulse a
    feared Russian attack. Russian-backed rebels also launched a new
    offensive in Abkhazia, a second separatist region of Georgia, in an
    attempt to drive Georgian forces out of the only remaining area of the
    territory still in their control.

    Earlier Mr Medvedev said: 'I have decided to stop the operation to
    force the Georgian authorities to peace.

    The security of our peacekeepers and civilians has been restored.

    'The aggressor has been punished and suffered very significant
    losses. Its armed forces have been disorganised.'

    His intervention prompted international relief amid hopes it would
    calm world oil markets which have been shaken by the potential risk to
    the major pipeline running through Georgian territory which supplies
    many Western countries.

    But there were clear warning signs that the conflict could continue as
    Mr Medvedev said that Russian forces would still defend themselves and
    crush any signs of Georgian resistance.

    'If there are any emerging hotbeds of resistance or any aggressive
    actions, you should take steps to destroy them,' he added.

    The Georgian president responded by saying he would regard the
    breakaway-regions Abkhazia and South Ossetia as occupied territories.

    Mikhail Saakashvili says Georgia will officially designate Russian
    peacekeepers in the provinces of Abkhazia and South Ossetia as
    occupying forces.

    His prime minister Lado Gurgenidze also said he wanted to see more
    evidence of a Russian ceasefire and would remain 'prepared for
    everything' until Moscow signed a formal peace deal.

    Before the ceasefire order, today's new attacks - which came on the
    fifth day of fighting since the conflict was triggered by Georgia's
    attempt to seize control of South Ossetia - had raised fears that the
    Georgian capital Tbilisi could come under threat.

    On guard: Russian soldiers take cover as a tank convoy enters
    Tskhinvali, capital of the Georgian breakaway enclave of South Ossetia
    yesterday

    Russia's deputy prime minister has warned that it will be 'decades'
    before the South Ossetians might be ready to accept any Georgian
    presence in their country and the Russian foreign minister Sergei
    Lavrov today insisted that Georgia must sign a legally binding
    document on the nonuse of force before any progress could be made.

    He added that Moscow could not agree to any peace plan for South
    Ossetia if it included Georgians in a future peacekeeping force
    because they had attacked Russian colleagues during Tbilisi's push to
    recapture the breakaway region.

    'They can no longer remain. They brought shame upon themselves as
    peacekeepers. They committed crimes,' said Mr Lavrov.

    Earlier today, the crisis, which has claimed several thousand lives,
    widened when Russian-backed rebels in Abkhazia launched artillery
    strikes in a bid to drive Georgia forces out of the territory-
    Abkhazia's self-styled foreign minister Sergei Shamba said his forces
    were driving Georgian troops out of the Kodori Gorge - the last
    remaining part of the territory held by Georgia.

    He insisted that Russian soldiers were not involved despite Moscow's
    deployment of more than 9,000 troops to the area earlier this week.

    'The operation to liberate Kodori Gorge has started,' Mr Shamba
    said. 'Our troops are making advances. We are hoping for success.'

    That led to a defiant response from Mr Saakashvili, who told his
    country to fight on. 'Georgia will never surrender,' he said.

    'They should know Georgia will never surrender. I directly accuse
    Russia of ethnic cleansing.'

    The president added that his country had now effectively been cut in
    two by the Russia's capture of the main eastwest highway close to the
    key city of Gori.

    Shortly after he spoke, Russian aircraft bombed Gori, injuring and
    killing several civilians in the virtually deserted streets. A Dutch
    TV cameraman was among those killed.

    'The bombs hit in front of us and beside us,' a Reuters reporter
    driving through Gori said.

    'Several people were wounded and lying in the street. We got straight
    out of there.' Georgian soldiers abandoned the town in disarray
    yesterday.

    The attack on Gori - coupled with Russia's capture of two strategic
    towns, Senaki and Zugdidi, inside Georgia yesterday - intensified the
    growing international unease.

    Georgia borders the Black Sea between Turkey and Russia and was ruled
    by Moscow for most of the two centuries preceding the 1991 break-up of
    the Soviet Union.

    Both South Ossetia and Abkhazia have run their own affairs without
    international recognition since fighting to split from Georgia in the
    early 1990s - and both have close ties with Moscow.

    President Bush said today: 'Russia has invaded a sovereign
    neighbouring state and threatens a democratic government elected by
    its people.

    Such an action is unacceptable in the 21st century.'

    -Russia Times
Working...
X