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  • South Ossetia Braced for Conflict

    South Ossetia Braced for Conflict

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
    July 27, 2006

    A summer full of fear and violence leaves South Ossetians expecting
    the worst in the confrontation with Tbilisi.

    By Irina Kelekhsayeva in Tskhinval

    One of the points of tension in South Ossetia this July has been
    the unofficial border-post between South Ossetia and Georgia near
    the village of Ergneti. For several months now, the border has been
    under the control of special units of the Georgian interior ministry
    and military police. The Georgian troops are in uniform with black
    masks hiding their faces.

    For three weeks, a group of cars has been waiting at this post. Their
    passengers are Russian, Armenian, and Lithuanian citizens of Armenian
    origin - all of them wanting to travel to Armenia via South Ossetia,
    after passing through North Ossetia and the Roki tunnel into the
    unrecognised republic. They have about 20 children with them, who
    cannot remember when they last took a bath or ate a proper meal.

    Agaron Babaian, heading for Armenia from Volgograd, has been stuck here
    for 19 days. He said that the only reason given to them for refusing
    them onward passage is that "we've travelled through South Ossetia".

    The hot summer is proving full of tension for South Ossetia. Georgian
    defence minister Irakli Okruashvili recently raised the temperature
    when he said he hoped to celebrate next New Year in Tskhinvali (which
    Ossetians call Tskhinval).

    Georgia's conflict resolution minister Giorgi Khaindrava, who was
    responsible for dealing with South Ossetia, was sacked on July 21
    after openly disagreeing with Okruashvili about the situation in the
    troubled region.

    South Ossetia has been outside Tbilisi's since 1992 and has declared
    independence. After years of relative peace, fighting broke out there
    again in the summer of 2004 and dozens of people were killed.

    This summer, tensions are running particularly high near the
    Tamarasheni, an ethnic Georgian village inside South Ossetia. Most
    residents of South Ossetia have Russian passports, which provides a
    pretext for the Georgian policemen near Tamarasheni to harass them.

    Dina Alborova, a human rights campaigner from South Ossetia,
    experienced this at first hand.

    "At the end of June, I was going back home to Tskhinval from a
    trip abroad," she said. "In Tamarasheni our car was stopped by two
    Georgians, who asked us to show our passports. They looked through
    our gear and started examining our documents. They had no military
    insignia, and it was unclear which service they belonged to. Then
    they started to demand an entrance visa to Georgia, although they
    knew I lived in Tskhinval. They made fun of me, saying there was no
    South Ossetia, there was only Georgia which I, a Russian citizen,
    was trying to enter."

    A businesswoman from Tskhinval, Zalina Gabayeva, says that after she
    showed her Russian passport at the same checkpoint, a uniformed man
    threatened to tear it up or rub out everything that was written in it.

    The situation first began to heat up more than a month ago, after a
    Georgian police post was unexpectedly moved 400 metres nearer to the
    village of Pris on June 14 and a brigade of Georgian interior ministry
    special forces appeared in the village, frightening the locals.

    Then, early on the morning of July 9 the secretary of South Ossetia's
    security council, Oleg Alborov, was killed by a remote-controlled
    bomb as he was opening the doors of his garage.

    The South Ossetian authorities accused the Georgian government of
    plotting Alborov's assassination - although some locals are inclined
    to point to other causes, such as an incident in which Alborov shot
    dead a teenager trying to highjack his car.

    Five days later, another explosion targeted Bala Bestauty, a deputy
    in the South Ossetian parliament and commander of a defence ministry
    unit. The explosion killed two teenagers who were passing by, while
    Bestauty himself escaped death.

    Bestauty is a popular and respected figure in South Ossetia who took
    part in the defence of the Pris Heights above Tskhinval in 2004,
    so most people saw this as a purely politically motivated attack.

    Predictions that war was about to break out became rife on July 13 and
    14, when travellers on the Trans-Caucasian highway connecting South
    Ossetia and Russia saw a military column of 300 military vehicles,
    tanks and other military equipment moving towards the Roki Tunnel
    from the North Ossetian side.

    Three days passed before any information was made public, and it was
    then announced that the armoured column was taking part in Russian
    "military exercises" in the North Caucasus

    On July 16, the parliament of Northern Ossetia, on the Russian side
    of the border, passed a resolution promising to "provide any kind of
    help to our brothers in South Ossetia if necessary".

    In its turn, the Georgian parliament passed a July 18 resolution
    calling for the withdrawal of all Russian peacekeeping forces from
    both Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

    The sacking of Khaindrava on July 21 confirmed in the minds of many
    that Georgia was preparing for war.

    Boris Chochiev, South Ossetia's chief negotiator in the talks with
    Georgia, commented, "The 'party of war' in the Georgian leadership is
    taking the lead. The resignation of Giorgi Khaindrava is a continuation
    of the programme devised by defence minister Irakli Okruashvili and
    it's aimed at resolving the conflict by force."

    South Ossetian resident Yuri Dzidtsoity agrees. "I think war is a
    real prospect," he said. "A gun hanging on the wall in the first act
    of a play is sure to go off in the second. If they hold exercises,
    and build bases and morgues, then they have some intentions. Russia
    taking its troops to the Roki Tunnel is no coincidence either. It's
    ludicrous to think that [the Georgians and Russians] will just exchange
    fire and bypass our territory."

    South Ossetia is thus bracing itself for conflict. Men of all ages
    have been receiving call-up papers and are preparing to be drafted
    into armed militias.

    Even patients at the Nadezhda addiction clinic are being drafted. The
    director of the centre Lira Tskhovrebova said that two of her charges
    had been called up and would have to cut short the treatment and go
    for military drilling. Other South Ossetians say they are praying
    they won't be caught up in a new war.

    According to teacher Esma Abayeva, "A war will begin only if their
    [the Georgians'] heads stop working. Because that will be the end
    of Georgia, as it is sure to lose the war. If a war does begin, I'm
    not going anywhere. I was born here, I live here and I have to see
    my people become free at last."

    Pensioner Vera Jagayeva said, "I don't think there will be a war. I'm
    sure of it, because Georgians know that they won't win this war. This
    is what all ordinary Georgians are sure of, too. If a war does start,
    I will send my children away, but I won't move a single step out of
    here myself. I'm certain ordinary Georgians don't want a war either."

    Irina Kelekhsayeva is a freelance journalist in Tskhinval, South
    Ossetia.
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