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UK Newsbritons Flee Red Army's Battle Zone

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  • UK Newsbritons Flee Red Army's Battle Zone

    UK NEWSBRITONS FLEE RED ARMY'S BATTLE ZONE
    By Mark Reynolds and Will Stewart

    UK Express
    Wednesday August 13,2008
    UK

    A terrified group of British tourists found themselves directly in
    the path of the advancing Russian army, it emerged yesterday.

    As Russian president Dmitry Medvedev called a halt to military action,
    it was revealed how the Britons, on a walking holiday in Georgia,
    had to flee for their lives from the Red Army.

    The 11 men and women, aged between 31 and 59, were finishing a 10-day
    mountain trip on Saturday and were completely oblivious to the outbreak
    of a war that has cost more than 2,000 lives.

    As they descended from a mountain, the party suddenly came into mobile
    phone contact from people in the city of Kutaisi - and were stunned
    to learn the entire Red Army was fast heading their way.

    Jonny Bealby, of travel company Wild Frontiers, said: "Sometimes we
    have to get people out of tricky situations - but I've never had to
    deal with a full advancing army before."

    One of the group, engineer Ross Bishop, 31, from Preston, Lancs,
    told how their phones started ringing as they reached a remote village.

    He said: "When we drove towards the border we saw military transport
    carrying troops. It's a new one for me, being on holiday in a war
    zone."

    They were driven through the mountains in 4x4s and a minibus then
    took them to safety in Armenia. Most flew home yesterday.

    Mr Bealby said: "The party would not have known much about the war
    until they got to Kutaisi. At that stage the fighting wasn't as
    serious as it became. But we knew from our experience of that region
    that the city of Gori was a possible target.

    "As it turned out the party was literally 48 hours in front of the
    Russian army - and directly in its path."

    Gori later came under heavy Russian bombardment, causing hundreds of
    Georgian families to flee.

    Two Britons - David McDowell, a teacher at Fettes College, in
    Edinburgh, and his friend Gavin Adams - refused to break their holiday
    in Georgia.

    They had travelled to Gori to see the birthplace of Joseph Stalin. Mr
    McDowell said: "We've paid for this holiday and we're going to
    enjoy it."

    Last night the Foreign Office said about 350 Britons were still trying
    to escape the war-torn country and it was providing coaches from the
    capital Tbilisi to help the evacuation.

    A group of the most vulnerable, mostly the elderly and children,
    was last night due to be flown to Paris.
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