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South Ossetia Votes For Independence

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  • South Ossetia Votes For Independence

    SOUTH OSSETIA VOTES FOR INDEPENDENCE

    Al-Jazeera, Qatar
    Nov 13 2006

    Voters in Georgia's breakaway region of South Ossetia have
    overwhelmingly backed its independence.

    Preliminary results indicate 99 per cent of people voted "yes" to
    independence, while in a presidential poll 96 per cent supported
    Eduard Kokoity, the current South Ossetian leader, Bela Pliyeva,
    the head of the election commission, said.

    South Ossetia's leadership has described the referendum as a first
    step towards international acceptance.

    No country is expected to recognise the result of Sunday's vote,
    although Russia has given de facto backing to the South Ossetian
    leadership and urged Georgia to accept the outcome.

    Konstantin Zatulin, a member of Russia's parliament who was in
    Tshkhinvali to observe the referendum, said: "We need to move towards
    recognising reality."

    Disputed regions

    "South Ossetia is a reality, like Transdnestr, Abkhazia and Nagorny
    Karabakh," he added, referring to other disputed former Soviet regions.

    Only 55,000 people were elligible to vote in the referendum

    Tbilisi, the Georgian capital, has repeatedly rejected South Ossetia's
    calls for independence and accused Moscow of trying to annex both
    South Ossetia and Abkhazia, another breakaway region.

    No independent international monitors observed the polling, which
    has been widely criticised.

    Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, the secretary-general of the Nato military
    alliance, said "such actions serve no purpose other than to exacerbate
    tensions in the South Caucasus region".

    'Unhelpful and unfair'

    The head of the 46-nation Council of Europe called the referendum
    "unnecessary, unhelpful and unfair".

    "The results will not be recognised by the international community,
    the vote did nothing to bring forward the search for a peaceful
    political solution," Terry Davis, the secretary general of the human
    rights organisation, said.

    The Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) called
    it "counterproductive".

    Election officials said more than 90 per cent of the 55,000
    eligible voters turned out for the the second vote on the province's
    independence since 1992.

    South Ossetia declared independence after a war with Georgian forces
    in 1991-1992 that killed more than 1,000 people and displaced tens
    of thousands.
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