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Georgian Leader Rails Against Russia, Announces Break From CIS

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  • Georgian Leader Rails Against Russia, Announces Break From CIS

    GEORGIAN LEADER RAILS AGAINST RUSSIA, ANNOUNCES BREAK FROM CIS

    RIA Novosti
    18:09 | 12/ 08/ 2008

    MOSCOW, August 12 (RIA Novosti) - Georgia's president gave a speech
    in front of thousands of flag-waving supporters outside parliament
    on Tuesday, denouncing Russia and declaring his country's withdrawal
    from a post-Soviet alliance.

    Mikheil Saakashvili has accused Russia of occupying half his country
    in a "peace enforcement operation" that ended on Tuesday. Russia says
    it no longer considers Saakashvili a partner, following Georgia's
    offensive in breakaway Ossetia last Friday, which killed at least
    1,600 people, most of whom were Russian citizens.

    "As president of Georgia, I stand before you in very difficult
    circumstances... Yesterday I saw with my own eyes how we were bombed,"
    he said.

    Georgia will "continue to stand firm" against the Russian aggressors,
    the president told the crowd.

    He also announced that his country would leave the Commonwealth of
    Independent States, and urged Ukraine to follow suit.

    "We have decided that Georgia will leave the CIS," he said. "We
    urge Ukraine and other countries to also leave the Commonwealth of
    Independent States, which is dominated by Russia."

    Excluding Georgia, the CIS has 10 full members - Armenia, Azerbaijan,
    Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Russia, Tajikistan, Ukraine
    and Uzbekistan.

    Saakashvili said Georgia now considers Russian troops in the South
    Ossetia and Abkhazia, Georgia's other rebel region, to be occupiers.

    "We have taken the decision to declare Russian armed forces in Abkhazia
    and South Ossetia occupying forces," he said.

    Russia's foreign minister earlier on Tuesday highlighted the severity
    of the crimes committed by Georgian forces in their attack on South
    Ossetia, and said Russia can no longer negotiate with President
    Saakashvili.

    "The best thing would be for him to resign," Sergei Lavrov said.

    Saakashvili "has killed our [Russian] citizens, ordered the crushing
    of women and children by tanks, and the burning alive of a group of
    girls herded into a cattle shed," Lavrov said. "And not only did he
    do all this with a background of European flags, but he declared that
    he was safeguarding American values."

    "The crimes committed by the Tbilisi regime in South Ossetia merit
    investigation at an international tribunal," he said.
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