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Politics, Astrophysics, Missing

News & Issues > Georgian Troops Burn South Ossetian Refugees Alive
 

Georgian Troops Burn South Ossetian Refugees Alive


Georgian troops burn South Ossetian refugees alive


Israeli mass media published several articles August 10 dedicated to
the war in South Ossetia. Newspapers paid special attention to arms
shipments to Georgia, which Israel had made in the past. A former
defense ministry official said that the Georgian army had no chances in
the opposition to the Russian army.
Georgian troops burn South Ossetian refugees alive Georgian troops burn South Ossetian refugees alive

Russia’s Foreign Ministry accused Ukraine of
encouraging Georgia to interventions and ethnic cleansings in South
Ossetia. Russia also claimed that Ukraine had armed Georgia to the
teeth. Georgia’s ground forces possess weapons, ammunition, unmanned
aircraft, night vision goggles and other equipment made in Israel.

Israel’s Defense Ministry recommended to cease arms
shipments to Georgia after the start of military actions in South
Ossetia, not to provoke Russia.

Battles in South Ossetia continued throughout the
night. Russian sources said that about 2,000 people had been killed in
South Ossetia.

Ukrainian Foreign Ministry stated that the country
reserved the right to forbid vessels of the Russian Black Sea Navy to
return to their base in Ukraine’s Sevastopol.

Ukrainian official said that Ukraine was not willing to become involved in the conflict.

In the meantime, the armed forces of another
unrecognized republic, Abkhazia, moved closer to its borderline with
Georgia, Interfax reports with reference to Abkhazia’s defense
ministry.

“Georgia does not stop its treacherous actions on
Abkhazia’s border and continues to intensify its military presence. The
armed forces of the republic were forced to enter the security zone and
advance towards the Georgian border,” an official spokesman for the
defense ministry of Abkhazia said.

It was reported that Georgia delivered a note to the
Consul of the Russian Federation to Georgia which said that Georgia
intended to end military actions in South Ossetia on August 10.

The note also said that Georgia was ready to
immediately start cease-fire negotiations with the Russian Federation,
Interfax reports.

However, fierce battles in South Ossetia continued
on August 10 despite the official note. In addition, Georgia’s Defense
Minister, Timur Yakobashvili, stated Sunday that the retreat of the
Georgian troops from South Ossetia was out of the question.

“We decided to redeploy our troops to be able to
resist the Russian armed forces, which outnumber our troops,”
Yakobasvili said.

Russia’s General Staff of Armed Forces said that
Russia had lost only two fighter jets in the conflict zone, but not 12
jets, as Georgian officials previously claimed.

“This number has nothing to do with the real state of affairs. We lost
two aircraft – Su-25 and Tu-22 – and the situation has not changed
since then,” Russia’s senior defense official, Anatoly Nogovitsin said.

Ossetian journalists wrote on their website that
Georgian troops had captured a group of refugees from one of the
regions of S. Ossetia. The Georgian military men locked them in a house
and set the house on fire, burning all the people inside alive. An
Ossetian woman informed Russian Prime Minister Putin of the hideous
crime during his visit to a refugee camp. Another woman told Putin that
she had seen a Georgian tank running over an elderly Ossetian woman who
was trying to save two children. The woman was running out of the
village, occupied the by the Georgian troops.

French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner called the
hostilities in South Ossetia "massacres" and also said Sunday he would
press Georgia and Russia for an immediate end to the violence in the
breakaway Georgian province.

Kouchner said the EU cannot allow such a "Middle Age
battle" to continue. He spoke in an interview with The Associated Press
hours before he and Finnish Foreign Minister Alexander Stubb left Paris
for a meeting with Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili in Tbilisi.

The EU "cannot accept such a war, a terribly
devastating and ... unacceptable war, at our doors," Kouchner said.
France has held the EU's six-month rotating presidency since July 1.

French President Sarkozy, who spoke by telephone
with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and Georgian Mikhail
Saakashvili, said an agreement between the two neighbors not to use
force against one another would be the best way of making sure any
future accord would stick.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, however,
disputed Georgia's claim that its troops have pulled out of South
Ossetia. He said there were still Georgian troops in certain
neighborhoods of provincial capital Tskhinvali, the AP reports.

Russia, which has outgunned the Georgian army and
showcased its military might during the conflict, must be treated as "a
great partner" in order for a political solution to be found, Kouchner
said.

"There is not at all a military solution in this area, absolutely not, and we all know that," he said.

The EU, the United Nations and the U.S. could be
among participants in any future political solution, Kouchner said. He
did not say in what role they could contribute.

Polish Foreign Minister Radek Sikorski urged the EU
to send a peacekeeping mission, telling Poland's TVN24 that Europe
"could be a good partner because it's credible to both sides."

Georgia began an offensive to regain control over
South Ossetia overnight Friday, launching heavy rocket and artillery
fire and air strikes, killing hundreds of innocent people. In response,
Russia, which has granted passports to most South Ossetians, launched
overwhelming artillery shelling and air attacks on Georgian troops.

posted on Aug 11, 2008 2:14 PM ()

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