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Two Hundred Germans Have Left Georgia: Berlin

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  • Two Hundred Germans Have Left Georgia: Berlin

    TWO HUNDRED GERMANS HAVE LEFT GEORGIA: BERLIN

    AFP
    Khaleej Times
    11 August 2008
    United Arab Emirates

    BERLIN - Around 200 Germans have left Georgia because of the current
    conflict and 100 more are due to leave by bus later on Monday for
    the Armenian capital Yerevan, the German foreign ministry said.

    Some 300 German citizens were still in Georgia and the German embassy
    was taking steps to contact them to give them a chance to leave
    the country if they wished, ministry spokesman Jens Ploetner told a
    news conference.

    Ploetner stressed that the Germans were not being "evacuated" but were
    leaving voluntarily. He added that the German embassy in Tbilisi was
    also ready to help citizens from other European citizens.

    "There is no reason for panic but we are calling on all German
    citizens... to contact the embassy," he said.

    Russian planes bombed radars at Tbilisi airport and hit civilian
    targets in the city of Gori near the border with South Ossetia on
    Monday, a Georgian interior ministry spokesman said.

    The UN refugee agency said that up to 80 percent of Gori's population
    of 50,000 have fled the city -- the main Georgian city near to South
    Ossetia -- because of Russian attacks.

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel spoke by phone with Georgian President
    Mikheil Saakashvili on Monday morning and repeated her call for an
    immediate end to all violence, her spokesman Thomas Steg said.

    Merkel also fully supports the decision of French President Nicolas
    Sarkozy, whose country holds the rotating EU presidency, to go to
    Moscow, Steg added.

    Merkel said it was "essential that there is an immediate and
    non-conditional ceasefire and for all armed forces to withdraw to
    the positions held before the conflict" and that "the territorial
    integrity of Georgia should be respected," Steg said.

    He added that a meeting between Merkel and Russian President Dmitry
    Medvedev in Sochi on the Black Sea would take place on Friday as
    planned, but that contrary to the original agenda "practically the
    only topic" of discussion would be the current conflict.

    German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier has also spoken
    several times by phone with his Russian and Georgian counterparts,
    and also took part in a conference call on Sunday with other EU
    foreign ministers, Ploetner said.
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