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Foreigners Flee Georgia After Attack On Ossetia

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  • Foreigners Flee Georgia After Attack On Ossetia

    FOREIGNERS FLEE GEORGIA AFTER ATTACK ON OSSETIA
    By Kirill Besonov

    Moscow News
    15/08/2008
    Russia

    Thousands of foreign citizens left Georgia after the attack on
    South Ossetia and the subsequent involvement of Russian troops who
    moved in to secure peace in the region. With air traffic crippled as
    Georgia announced it was in a state of war, many people had to move
    to neighboring Armenia by buses and car convoys to get to safety.

    The United States was the first to start the evacuation. On Sunday
    and Monday, about 170 U.S. citizens left the Georgian capital of
    Tbilisi and were delivered across the border with Armenia by car
    convoys. The evacuees included businessmen and tourists and also
    families and dependants of U.S. diplomats stationed in Georgia. The
    entire staff of the U.S. Peace Corps in Georgia also left the country
    before Thursday. The U.S. embassy in Tbilisi, however, remained open
    and provided consultations. On Wednesday the U.S. State Department
    issued a notice in which it advised all Americans to leave Georgia
    despite the Russian order to end military action.

    Seeing the great increase in people willing to leave Georgia, Armenian
    authorities introduced a simplified scheme of border crossing, allowing
    about 2,000 foreign citizens to enter the country, from where they
    could head home. According to the Arme­nian Foreign Ministry report,
    about 2,000 foreigners entered Armenia from Georgia between Sunday
    and Wednesday. This figure included many diplomats and their family
    members. In addition, about 7,500 Armenian citizens chose to return
    to their country.

    The route through Armenia beca­me the most popular way for so many
    people because Georgia stop­ped air traffic with Russia and many
    other countries, including Germany and Ukraine. Some destinations,
    such as Latvia and Israel were still accessible, but given the number
    of potential passengers, there were not enough places for everyone.

    Several Russian citizens reported that Georgian authorities barred
    them from leaving the country. They said their papers were checked
    and they were ordered to return to their places of residence. The
    Russian Foreign Ministry said on Tuesday it received about 12 phone
    calls with such complaints. The Georgian side said the move was caused
    by security fears, but Russian diplomats still considered issuing a
    protest against the infringement of the Russian citizens' rights.

    There were no reports of casualties among foreigners in the latest
    Georgian-Ossetian conflict, but according to the International News
    Safety Institute, four journalists were reported dead as of Thursday
    morning. The killed were Alexander Klimchuk, the Russian owner of
    Georgia's independent photo agency Caucasus Press Images; Grigol
    Chikhladze from Newsweek Russia; and Dutch cameraman Stans Storimans,
    39, of the news station RTL. A so-far unidentified Georgian journalist
    and his driver were also reported dead, the INSI report read. At
    least 10 journalists were reported wounded.

    --Boundary_(ID_XAzGRIkcNjqQu5T+CKxPhw)--
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