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Blast In Georgian Rebel Region Kills 4

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  • Blast In Georgian Rebel Region Kills 4

    Blast in Georgian Rebel Region Kills 4
    Michael Schwirtz

    The New York Times Company
    July 8, 2008

    MOSCOW -- An explosion in a cafe in a separatist region of the former
    Soviet republic of Georgia killed four people Sunday night, including
    a security service official from the rebel government. Six people
    were injured in the blast.

    It was latest in at least half a dozen bombings in less than a week
    in Abkhazia and the first to cause deaths.

    Although no suspects have been identified, leaders of the separatist
    government blamed Georgia, which they accused of inflaming a 15-year
    conflict that has been marked by increasing violence in recent
    months. Georgia, which claims Abkhazia as part of its territory,
    has denied involvement.

    The bomb exploded at about 11 p.m. Sunday at a café in the city of
    Gali in the southeast of Abkhazia close to the Georgian border, said
    Alkhad D. Cholokua, a spokesman for the president of the separatist
    government. The blast killed the chief of the security service in
    Gali, along with a border guard. A female employee of the cafe and a
    translator for the United Nations mission in Abkhazia were also killed.

    "We are considering many possibilities, but the main theory is that
    this was a terrorist attack," said Mr. Cholokua.

    Sergei V. Bagapsh, Abkhazia's president, told the Interfax news
    agency on Monday that Georgia had planted the bomb to "destabilize
    the regional situation."

    "The new incident confirms that Georgia has taken the path of state
    terrorism," he said.

    Abkhazia, a slice of mountains and subtropical beaches on the Black
    Sea, gained de facto independence from Georgia following a fierce
    war from 1992 to 1993 that left thousands dead. Since then, sporadic
    violence has punctuated an uneasy stalemate.

    The conflict intensified after Georgia's president, Mikheil
    Saakashvili, took office in 2004 vowing to bring Abkhazia and another
    breakaway region, South Ossetia, under Georgia's control. In recent
    months, Abkhaz officials have accused Georgia of preparing for
    another war.

    Shota Utiashvili, a senior official in the Georgian interior ministry,
    said Georgia had nothing to do with Sunday's explosion.

    "We heard from the media about the explosion in Gali," he said. "All
    the information that we have about that explosion comes from open
    sources."

    Georgian police are also investigating five nearly simultaneous
    explosions just across the border from Gali in the Georgian-controlled
    Zugdidi region, Mr. Utiashvili said. One police officer was slightly
    injured.

    Georgia has accused Russia in the past of aiding the separatists,
    providing them with weapons and other equipment. Russia says it
    maintains a peacekeeping force of about 2,500 troops in Abkhazia,
    although Georgia says there could be hundreds more clandestinely
    training and leading Abkhaz units.

    Moscow has repeatedly denied the claims, and charges Georgia with
    stoking tensions.

    In a meeting with President Bush on Monday at the Group of 8 meeting
    in Japan, President Dmitry A. Medvedev of Russia said his country was
    prepared to normalize relations with Georgia, but that Georgia lacked
    the will to move toward reconciliation, the Kremlin Web site said.

    A day earlier, according to the Kremlin site, Mr. Medvedev met
    with Mr. Saakashvili in Astana, Kazakhstan, and warned his Georgian
    counterpart against "inflaming the situation in the region."

    --Boundary_(ID_gtbFAz16cO9pJUuWZPTz Wg)--
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