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Georgia pulls troops out of South Ossetia

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  • Georgia pulls troops out of South Ossetia

    Peninsula On-line, Qatar

    Georgia pulls troops out of South Ossetia

    Web posted at: 8/11/2008 3:33:43

    Source ::: AP/AFP/REuters

    A Georgian woman holding her baby cries at her damaged home in Gori
    yesterday. (REUTERS)

    GORI, Georgia ¢ Georgian troops retreated from the breakaway
    province of South Ossetia yesterday as their US-allied government
    ordered a ceasefire and pressed for a truce, overwhelmed by Russian
    firepower in a conflict that threatened to set off a wider war.

    Russia deployed a naval squadron off the coast of another of Georgia's
    separatist regions, Abkhazia, and its jets bombed the outskirts of
    Tblisi, the Georgian capital.

    Georgia's Foreign Ministry said its soldiers were observing a
    cease-fire on orders of the president and notified Russia's envoy to
    Tbilisi. "Georgia expresses its readiness to immediately start
    negotiations with the Russian Federation on cease-fire and termination
    of hostilities," the ministry said in a statement.

    The Russian Foreign Ministry had no immediate response to the Georgian
    offer. It came as the UN Security Council ' where Russia has veto
    power ' met in an open session and European diplomats sought to
    mediate.

    The foreign ministers of Georgia and Russia held direct talks
    yesterday on the escalating conflict in the Caucasus, a German deputy
    foreign minister said. The German minister, Gernot Erler, said Foreign
    Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier had been holding telephone talks with
    his counterparts around the world with the aim of bringing the
    Georgian and the Russian ministers together. "There has now been
    direct contact between the Georgian foreign minister (Eka
    Tkeshelashvili) and the Russian foreign minister (Sergei Lavrov),"
    Erler told ARD public television.

    Steinmeier spoke with Tkeshelashvili and Lavrov earlier, and the
    foreign ministers of France, Poland and Finland as well as US
    Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and EU foreign policy chief Javier
    Solana over the weekend.

    The United States will offer a UN Security Council resolution today
    condemning the Russian military "assault" against Georgia as
    unacceptable, a US spokesman said.

    The spokesman for the US delegation at the United Nations, Richard
    Grenell said: "We will offer a resolution today that makes clear that
    the Russian actions in Georgia are unacceptable to the international
    community and we condemn this military assault."

    Russia, which is a permanent veto-wielding member of the council and
    can single-handedly block any US resolution, had no immediate response
    to the announcement.

    Georgia, whose troops have been trained by American soldiers, began an
    offensive to regain control over South Ossetia overnight on Friday,
    launching heavy rocket and artillery fire and air strikes that pounded
    the provincial capital, Tskhinvali. In response, Russia, which has
    granted passports to most South Ossetians, launched overwhelming
    artillery shelling and air attacks on Georgian troops.

    Russia has demanded that Georgia pull out its troops from South
    Ossetia as a condition for a cease-fire. It also urged Georgia to sign
    a pledge not to use force against South Ossetia as another condition
    for ending hostilities. Earlier, Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister
    Grigory Karasin said that Moscow now needs to verify the Georgian
    withdrawal. "We must check all that. We don't trust the Georgian
    side," he said.

    Yesterday, Russian jets raided a plant on the eastern outskirts of
    Tbilisi that builds Su-25 ground jets. The attack damaged runways but
    caused no casualties, said Georgia's Interior Ministry spokesman Shota
    Utiashvili.

    The risk of the conflict setting off a wider war increased when
    Russian-supported separatists in another breakaway region of Georgia,
    Abkhazia, launched air and artillery strikes on Georgian troops to
    drive them out of a small part of the province they control. Fifteen
    UN military observers were told to evacuate. Both South Ossetia and
    Abkhazia have run their own affairs without international recognition
    since splitting from Georgia in the early 1990s and have built up ties
    with Moscow. Russia has granted its passports to most of their
    residents. In yet another sign that the conflict could widen, Ukraine
    warned Russia yesterday it could bar Russian navy ships from returning
    to their base in the Crimea because of their deployment to Georgia's
    coast.

    President Bush called for an end to the Russian bombings and an
    immediate halt to the violence. "The attacks are occurring in regions
    of Georgia far from the zone of conflict in South Ossetia. They mark a
    dangerous escalation in the crisis," Bush said in a statement to
    reporters while attending the Olympic Games in Beijing. Karasin said
    the ships were sent toward Abkhazia as a deterrent.

    "The deployment is quite natural. We don't want a repeat of what
    happened in South Ossetia," he said at a news conference.

    Italy and Poland yesterday led the evacuation of hundreds of foreign
    nationals caught up in the conflict, while two airlines suspended
    flights to Georgia. About 130 of the 200 Italian nationals known to be
    in Georgia left by bus for the Armenian capital Yerevan, an Italian
    foreign ministry spokesman said. Poland has sent a government plane to
    Yerevan to collect around 180 evacuees waiting there after completing
    a 260km crossing by coach from the Polish embassy in Georgia's
    capital, Tbilisi.

    Britain's Foreign Office has urged its nationals in Georgia on
    non-urgent business to "leave as soon as possible," advice echoed by
    Canada. The US State Department issued a travel advisory on Saturday
    to discourage Americans from visiting Georgia or its rebel territories
    of South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

    Germany advised its citizens in Georgia to leave the country by
    travelling overland to Armenia or Turkey. A group of Spanish tourists
    were also evacuated through Armenia, a Spanish diplomatic source
    said. France along with Spain, Sweden and Greece have also not made
    any decisions on immediate evacuations as they monitor the crisis
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