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Georgian bridge attack echoes beyond borders

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  • Georgian bridge attack echoes beyond borders

    Reuters South Africa, South Africa

    Georgian bridge attack echoes beyond borders
    Sat 16 Aug 2008, 19:53 GMT

    By Margarita Antidze

    KASPI, Georgia (Reuters) - The attack on Georgia's East-West railway
    lifeline was over in minutes, a small group of men in battle fatigues
    laying explosives on a key bridge before fleeing into the hills to
    detonate them.

    Residents of the town of Kaspi, in their accounts of the action, said
    the fighters were Russians, a charge the Russian General Staff
    dismissed as Georgian propaganda.

    Whoever was responsible for the action against such an important
    economic target after nine days of conflict, its consequences will be
    felt beyond Georgian borders in the volatile Caucasus region.

    Georgia's European Integration Minister, Georgy Baramidze, said the
    bombing of the bridge was "an economic disaster".

    "This is huge damage, not just for Georgia, but for Armenia and
    Azerbaijan and Central Asian countries, which are shipping goods and
    oil by Georgian railway."

    "The Russians, these barbarians, want to destroy our country
    economically," he told reporters in emotional language characteristic
    of the conflict around the Russian-backed separatist regions of South
    Ossetia and Abkhazia.

    The railways in Georgia are a potent symbol of Russia's imperial
    expansion and the consolidation of its power there in the 19th
    century. They enabled Russia to strengthen its hold on the region
    which it maintained until the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.

    Irregular pro-Russian militia groups based in South Ossetia have been
    active on Georgian territory throughout the conflict. Foreign and
    Georgian civilians have accused them of hijacking cars and
    looting. Russia has said it will bring them to heel.

    CEASEFIRE

    A 50-metre span across the river at Kaspi had collapsed completely,
    pitching slabs of rubble into the water and around its banks. Severed
    lengths of rail pointing up at the sky, power cables hung from their
    pylons.

    "There was a jeep and two Ural trucks," one resident told Georgian
    television, referring to the Russian-made heavy vehicles. "They took a
    huge sack and put it on the bridge, then walked up the hill and there
    was an explosion."

    He said the blast damaged the roof of his house and smashed windows
    far around.

    Within hours Georgian trucks arrived by road and a maintenance train
    by rail. Workers immediately began repairs.

    The incident occurred hours before Russian President Dmitry Medvedev
    signed a French-mediated ceasefire agreement already accepted by
    Georgia.

    The railway line runs from Tbilisi, through the now Russian-occupied
    town of Gori, before splitting in three and running to the Black Sea
    ports of Poti and Batumi and southwest down to just short of the
    Turkish border.

    On Friday, a Russian military convoy advanced to the Kaspi region from
    Gori near breakaway South Ossetia, the deepest incursion into Georgia
    proper in the confrontation.

    Russia drove Georgian forces from South Ossetia last week, in a
    massive counter-offensive after Tbilisi tried to retake the region
    from pro-Moscow separatists.

    (Writing by Ralph Boulton; editing by Robin Pomeroy)

    © Reuters 2008. All Rights Reserved.
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