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People in limbo a month after Russia closed border with Georgia

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  • People in limbo a month after Russia closed border with Georgia

    People remain in limbo a month after Russia closed border with Georgia - TV

    NTV, Moscow
    6 Oct 04

    [Presenter] Hundreds of people have been caught between two
    states. Russia announced the closure of its border for people crossing
    from Georgia. Tbilisi promised to solve the problem quickly. But
    passengers on scheduled buses and lorry drivers have been living in
    their vehicles for over a month.

    Here reporting from the so-called neutral territory is Nugzar
    Kereselidze.

    [Correspondent] In the Dariali Gorge on the Georgian military road 50
    lorries and buses have been caught in a stubborn trap. Having passed
    through the Lars border crossing in Georgia they did not manage to get
    across the so-called neutral zone of a sector of the Russian-Georgian
    border under review when Russia closed its frontier. The official
    reason for the closure of the border was the Beslan tragedy, and the
    necessity to apprehend all the people involved in the terrorist
    attack. The closure was made unexpectedly in the course of a few
    hours. For this reason hundreds of vehicles piled up on both sides. In
    the course of the next few days their number even increased, partly
    because the Georgian authorities gave a promise, as is said, to come
    to an agreement about opening the border. However, a month later
    passengers from Armenia are living in buses. There are many women and
    children among them.

    [Unidentified woman] People have been here for a month and two
    days. They are living or surviving. It's worse than survival. There
    are children, sick people and old people. And the older people are
    suffering. In the evening it's cold. Really cold.

    [Correspondent] When the passengers ran out of the food they had
    brought with them the drivers came to their aid with food that was
    beginning to go off. What had actually gone bad was thrown into the
    river Terek. A businessman from Yerevan, (?Artur Bagasyan), had to get
    rid of 30 tonnes of peaches.

    Several vehicles from Azerbaijan, Belarus and other countries turned
    round and went to Russia through South Ossetia using the Roki tunnel
    where the border had not been closed. This caused bewilderment in
    Tbilisi.

    [Korneli Salia, chief of headquarters at the Georgian Department of
    State Border Protection, captioned] Russia did not close this sector,
    which we don't understand. It turns out that Russian official bodies
    support the separatists prospering in South Ossetia.

    [Correspondent] More and more freight has now started passing into
    Russia through South Ossetia, despite the fact that a lot of money has
    to be paid for escorts and security. But businessmen have no
    choice. They agree to pay more rather than lose everything.
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