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Flashpoints In The Caucasus

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  • Flashpoints In The Caucasus

    FLASHPOINTS IN THE CAUCASUS

    Agence France Presse
    August 27, 2008 Wednesday 6:33 PM GMT


    The strategic flashpoint region of the Caucasus is the scene of
    regular clashes between its different ethnic groups.

    CHECHNYA: Chechnya unilaterally proclaimed independence from Russia
    in late 1991, just before the fall of the Soviet Union. Russia fought
    two wars to crush separatist rebels in the 1990s and continues to
    have sporadic clashes with them even after imposing a pro-Moscow
    regional government. Chechen rebel forces led a fierce independence
    fight in which as many as 100,000 civilians -- about 10 percent of
    the population -- are feared to have been killed since 1994.

    DAGESTAN: The biggest of Russia's Caucasus republics, mainly-Muslim
    Dagestan has been the scene since 1999 of incursions by Chechen
    rebels, in which several hundred have been killed. Dagestan kept
    out of the first Chechen war though it was used by the Chechens as
    a supply corridor. In 1999, homegrown Muslim radicals were joined by
    guerrillas from Chechnya in an attempt to establish an Islamic state
    that was quickly stamped out by the Russian army.

    INGUSHETIA: Ingushetia, a sister republic to Chechnya inhabited by
    a related ethnic group, is one of Russia's poorest regions. Like the
    Chechens, the Ingush were deported to Central Asia in 1944 by Stalin
    for "collaborating" with Nazi Germany. There has been some spillover
    from the Chechen conflict, and members of the military and police
    are regularly targeted in Ingushetia amid frequent clashes between
    security forces and pro-Chechen rebels.

    NORTH OSSETIA: North Ossetia, one of the smallest Russian republics,
    hosts the main Russian military base in the Caucasus and has
    historically had closer ties to Moscow than any other republic in
    the region. In 1992, more than 500 died in a brief ethnic conflict
    pitting North Ossetia against Ingushetia over a disputed region. In
    2004, armed rebels seized a school in the North Ossetian town of
    Beslan and more than 330 hostages, mostly children, were killed in the
    ensuing bloodbath. North Ossetians accuse the Ingush Muslim minority
    of fuelling terrorism in the region.

    SOUTH OSSETIA: South Ossetia, whose independence was recognised on
    Tuesday by Moscow less than 20 days after a failed Georgian attempt
    to retake control, is a pro-Russian separatist region of Georgia
    which proclaimed its independence after the collapse of the Soviet
    Union in 1991. It has long sought unification with the neighbouring
    Russian region of North Ossetia.

    In 1992, after a conflict with Georgia, a peacekeeping force of
    Ossetians, Georgians and Russians was deployed in the region but
    incidents continued.

    ABKHAZIA: Abkhazia, whose independence was recognised on Tuesday
    by Russia, is a pro-Russian separatist territory situated along
    Georgia's Black Sea coast which took up arms in 1992 to proclaim
    its independence.

    The conflict, which left thousands dead and 250,000 mostly ethnic
    Georgians displaced, ended in 1993 with the victory of the Abkhazians
    backed by Moscow. Despite a ceasefire signed in 1994 followed by the
    deployment of a Russian peacekeeping force and a UN observer mission,
    clashes continued. Many took place in the Kodori Gorge, a sliver of
    territory along the Abkhazian-Georgian administrative border.

    NAGORNO-KARABAKH: Backed by Armenia, ethnic Armenian forces took
    control of Nagorno-Karabakh, a 4,400 square kilometre (1,699 square
    mile) enclave surrounded by Azerbaijan but with a predominantly
    Armenian population, during a war in the early 1990s that killed
    thousands and forced nearly a million people on both sides to flee
    their homes.

    A ceasefire was signed between the two former Soviet republics in
    1994 but the dispute remains unresolved after more than a decade
    of negotiations. Troops remain in a tense stand-off and shootings
    are common.
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