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Italy evacuating citizens from Georgia

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  • Italy evacuating citizens from Georgia

    Italy evacuating citizens from Georgia
    The Associated Press
    August 10, 2008

    ROME: Italy evacuated most of its citizens in Georgia to neighboring
    Armenia on Sunday because of hostilities between Georgia and Russia
    over the separatist region of South Ossetia, the Foreign Ministry said.

    Buses carrying 134 people, including about 20 citizens from other EU
    countries, left Tbilisi for an airport in Gyumri, Armenia, around 150
    kilometers (90 miles) south of the Georgian capital, said Fabrizio
    Romano, head of the crisis unit at the ministry.

    Two Italian military C130 planes will fly the evacuees to Rome later
    Sunday, he said. Other Italians, most of them vacationing in the
    southern Black Sea city of Batumi, were making their way on their own
    to Turkey, which also borders Georgia.

    Georgia, meanwhile, agreed to a cease-fire and expressed its readiness
    to start negotiations with Russia. But Moscow said Georgian troops
    weren't observing the cease-fire pledge yet, the Interfax news agency
    reported.

    Earlier, Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini had called for an
    immediate cease-fire in the conflict, which erupted between Georgia and
    Russia after Tbilisi launched an offensive to retake the breakaway
    province.

    Today in Europe
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    require Russian helpThe Sunday paper: A British institution in search
    of a mission Russia expanded its bombing blitz Sunday, targeting Tbilisi
    for the first time and driving Georgian troops out of South Ossetia's
    provincial capital, Tskhinvali, with heavy shelling.

    In an interview with TV channel SKY TG 24, Frattini said Georgia's
    territorial integrity must be respected, but added that Italy "opposes
    the use of weapons to defend territorial integrity."

    He called on the European Union to come up with a common and "balanced"
    position on the crisis, adding that Premier Silvio Berlusconi had
    discussed the issue with French President Nicolas Sarkozy in a
    telephone call.

    "Italy is telling both sides to stop, to end the acts of hostility and
    the violence and worry about the population of South Ossetia, which has
    already suffered a lot," Frattini said.

    Around 50 protesters, meanwhile, marched through the streets of
    downtown Rome to Parliament in a pro-Georgia demonstration. They
    denounced Russia, chanting slogans and carrying banners that read "Stop
    bombing in Georgia" and "Europe, stop Russia."
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