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Georgian Rebel Region To Vote On Independence

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  • Georgian Rebel Region To Vote On Independence

    GEORGIAN REBEL REGION TO VOTE ON INDEPENDENCE
    By Niko Mchedlishvili

    Reuters
    11 Sep 2006 10:28:16 GMT

    TBILISI, Sept 11 (Reuters) - Georgia's breakaway region of South
    Ossetia said on Monday it will hold a referendum on independence
    in November, in a move that is likely to escalate tensions between
    Russia and Georgia.

    "South Ossetia will hold a referendum on independence on November 12,"
    Tamara Kelekhsayeva, a spokeswoman for the South Ossetian leadership,
    told Reuters by telephone.

    The question will be "whether you agree or not that South Ossetia
    should preserve its present status of an independent state and be
    recognised by the international community," she said.

    South Ossetia, a tiny region tucked away next to Russia's southern
    Caucasian border, fought a brief war in the early 1990s for
    independence from ex-Soviet Georgia and is a frequent source of
    tension between Moscow and Tbilisi.

    After that conflict, South Ossetia voted for independence in a
    referendum in 1992. It was not immediately clear why a new referendum
    was needed.

    Georgia accuses Russia of propping up the rebel province's rulers and
    its parliament in July accused Moscow of trying to annex the territory
    together with Abkhazia, another breakaway province of Georgia.

    Tension has risen since Mikhail Saakashvili was elected Georgian
    President in 2004 and vowed to re-unify his country.

    "This is political absurdity as this referendum will have no legal
    force," Besarion Jugeli, one of the leaders of the United National
    Movement party, which has a majority in the Georgian parliament,
    told Reuters.

    Russia has peacekeeping troops in South Ossetia. Moscow says they
    keep the two sides apart, while Tbilisi complains that they side with
    the separatists.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin, at a meeting with scholars on
    Saturday, said that if Serbia's breakaway province of Kosovo was
    given independence then ex-Soviet regions seeking self-rule should
    also being given independence.

    Putin mentioned South Ossetia and Abkhazia, the Dnestr region that
    broke away from Moldova in the 1990s and Nagorno-Karabakh, a separatist
    region of Azerbaijan, according to people at the meeting.

    Dnestr will hold a referendum on September 17 to confirm
    independence. The Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe
    (OSCE) has said it would not recognise the vote.
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