Thursday, January 08, 2009

- - - - - -

Merkel 'watching' Russian withdrawal

Sunday 17 August 2008

German Chancellor Angela Merkel strongly supported Georgia's bid to join NATO in a joint press conference with President Mikheil Saakashvili and warned Russia against further delaying its withdrawal from the country.

Sunday 17 August 2008

 

Russia announced it would begin withdrawing forces from Georgia on Monday after a war that dealt a humiliating blow to the Black Sea state and raised fears for energy supplies to Europe.

 

Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili, whose failed invasion of the pro-Russian breakaway region of South Ossetia triggered a Russian backlash that shocked the West, called for international monitoring of the pullout.

 

"I think the world should watch," he told a news conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Tbilisi. Merkel said the world would indeed be watching for Russia to withdraw quickly under the terms of a six-point peace plan brokered by France.

 

Russia's Defence Ministry, underlining continued high tension between the two countries, said Georgia was planning a "major provocative act" in the city of Gori, captured by Russian forces on Tuesday as they fanned out from the disputed region into the Georgian heartland.

 

It said Georgia was forming bands of mercenaries who would be given Russian uniforms and told to loot and pillage.

 

Georgia issued a swift denial. "Such a provocation would only be staged by the Russian side, with the aim of keeping Russian military units in the conflict zone," the Georgian Interior Ministry said in a statement.

 

Russian troops remained in position around Gori, which commands the approaches to South Ossetia and the main east-west highway and should be central to covering a Russian withdrawal.

 

Major-General Vyacheslav Borisov, now a familiar figure touring the area of his command around Gori in a Georgian four-wheel-drive, could not say when he would be moving out.

 

"We were the first in, so we'll be the last out," Borisov told Reuters at the roadside near Gori.

 
There was no sign of shooting and troops appeared relaxed.
 
 
 
NATO MEMBERSHIP
 

President Dmitry Medvedev, in announcing the pullout from midday on Monday during a telephone conversation with French President Nicolas Sarkozy, also gave no firm deadline for completion of the withdrawal.

 

A Georgian official accused Russian forces of destroying Georgian television and radio transmitters in the Gori region and installing their own.

 

Each side has levelled accusations of attempted genocide against the other. Russia says some 1,600 people were killed in the initial Georgian shelling of the South Ossetian capital of Tskhinvali while Georgia charges Russian and irregular forces levelled Georgian villages around Tskhinvali.

 

Merkel, in remarks likely to irk the Kremlin, raised the prospect of NATO membership for Georgia, which as a Soviet republic housed Moscow's frontline radar and missile defences.

 

"Every free, independent country can together with NATO members discuss when it can join NATO. In December we will have a first evaluation of the situation and we are on a clear path in the direction of NATO membership," she said.

 

Merkel said a buffer zone agreed under the ceasefire should not be used by Russia to extend the territory of South Ossetia, which broke with Tbilisi after the Soviet Union's 1991 collapse. "The security zone cannot be used as an excuse for Russian troops not to leave ... Georgia."

 
The Kremlin confirmed Sarkozy's account of his conversation with Medvedev.
 

 "From tomorrow, Russia will begin the withdrawal of the military contingent which was moved to reinforce Russian peacekeepers after the Georgian aggression against South Ossetia," the Kremlin said in a statement.

 

Russia has made clear it sees no prospect in the foreseeable future of South Ossetia being reintegrated into Georgia.

 

Talks are under way to establish international agreement on a peacekeeping force for the region which seems likely, whatever Georgia's objections, to include a large Russian contingent.

 
 
 
TOLL
 

The 10-day confrontation killed around 200 Georgians, dealt a crushing blow to the country's military, damaged its economy, disrupted road and rail links and drew criticism in the West of Saakashvili's handling of the crisis.

 

The Russian action rattled the West, which transports oil and gas from the Caspian region through pipelines across Georgian territory, a route favoured because it bypasses Russia. Some saw dark portents in Russia launching its first invasion of a former Soviet state.

 

Russia argued it was justified in intervening to protect South Ossetians, but Moscow also suffered losses, both human and economic. The campaign sent Russian stocks tumbling to their lowest in nearly two years and worried foreign investors.


 


 

  • 03/09/2008 03:31:03 Alert a moderator

    georgia and russia and moscow

    Mr.Bush don't tell russia to stop bullying they have their reason... I am pretty sure that they will work with each other without you poking your nose in their affair. You can't even be honest to the people in hawaii of how your government bullying the kanaka moli for years.

  • 19/08/2008 22:39:33 Alert a moderator

    Georgia

    Why is it OK for the US to invade Iraq and Afganastan; earlier Grenada and Panama, but Russia is condemed for looking out for her interests. The so called breakaway proviences are not Georgian. The people of Ossetia speak a variation of Farci and are related to the Persians and Kurds. They have been pro Russia from Czarist times when their Christian country was freed from the Ottoman Turks.

  • 19/08/2008 14:31:42 Alert a moderator

    Georgia

    Russia should stay out of this country & will make things worse on itself if it doesn't, ie countries joining NATO out of fear.

  • 19/08/2008 14:00:50 Alert a moderator

    world war 3 in the making

    The world could not understand nor control events leading to the first and second world war. Its history now huh !!? And we say we learn from history, dont we ? Now the world is busy shaping up to the worst catastrophe in history,: interestingly we are well aware of these events, we can control, because we starteted them, but what we see now, is those events that led to previous wars being repeated at an alarming and more sophisticated ways. Im scared , this is war, this is world war 3 in the making. Cant we learn from past experiences.

  • 16/08/2008 21:33:08 Alert a moderator

    Georgia WAR

    I think all European media is side by side with you USA against Russia which they React against the action of Georgia.
    I want to have explanation from European Union

  • 14/08/2008 23:52:25 Alert a moderator

    Independence

    The EU and the USA have accepted the illegal independence of Kossovo...why not with South Ossetia?

  • 14/08/2008 19:44:58 Alert a moderator

    Russia, Gori, and South Ossetians

    I can see why Russia won't leave South Ossetia, but Gori is another matter altogether. It needs to move now before this war makes its relations with the West worse. People talk about what Saakashvili lost because of his move last week, but he also got something big out of it: an increase in tensions between Russia and NATO and then demands from some quarters in NATO to allow Georgia to join. Russia should not be playing into Saakashvili's hand like this.

    Also, Russia needs to exercise firmer control over South Ossetians so that it does not end up associating itself with the abuses of irregular forces and opportunists from South Ossetia who are looking to take advantage of an apparent vacuum in law and order.

  • 14/08/2008 05:39:51 Alert a moderator

    Helping Georgia with Russia

    I am sick and tired of our country thinking that they can help everyone. What about taking care of things in our own backyards.....I will be writting my representatives bout it also.

  • 13/08/2008 21:43:06 Alert a moderator

    Georgia attacked Abkhazia in 1992

    Georgia attacked Abkhazia in 1992 and committed crimes against Abkhazian, Russian, Ukrainian citizens of this autonomic region. Georgia is as guilty of genocide in Abkhazia as Serbians in Kosovo. Russia did not want to allow Georgian to do the same in Ossetia. Much of the distrust from the area monorities toward Georgia is based on Georgia actions in Abkhazia.

  • 13/08/2008 20:20:57 Alert a moderator

    Commentary on Georgia

    I believe there is a lot of double standard involved. Georgia needs to take blame for attacking Abkhazia and Ossetia and Russia was right in its attempt to create the demilitarized zone. Ossetia must be allowed to become part of Russia. And internation aid should go to both sides, Georgia and Ossetia equally since both sides women, children, and elderly need food, shelter, clothing and medical assistance. Bush needs to accept thing sfor what they are not for what he would like it to be. And I agree with Putin, Saakashvili should go. Georgia cannot be allowed to join NATO because nobody wants to start a global war over lack of common sense on the part of Georgian leadership.

  • 13/08/2008 15:54:20 Alert a moderator

    fqsdfqdsf

    fdqsfqdfqdfqd

  • 13/08/2008 15:09:47 Alert a moderator

    Will Georgia keep the peace after its rampage through Ossetia?

    I hope that the U.S. satrap in Georgia Mikhiel Saakashvili have learnt a lesson in his misjudgment of South Ossetia and the Russian response to his aggression?

    It looks as if Saakashvili assumed too much not in evidence. That with his U.S. trained and armed troops that he could get away with murder in South Ossetia. The facts speak for themselves, the Georgian army however well-trained they were were no match for the Russian Krasnoarmayets. Not only were the Georgian inept, but as soldiers they were a total loss. Thus the only general that the Georgians had was GENERAL RETREAT. Well let us set what gives in Georgia after the South Ossetian debacle.

    Mikhael Saakashvili should be tried for WAR CRIMES, as he unleashed a reign of terror upon the civilians of the Republic of South Ossetia. Let him pay for his crime against humanity by a trial at THE HAGUE.

  • 13/08/2008 15:05:31 Alert a moderator

    pkf de Bernard Couchner

    Je suis prof de francais et je regarde chaque jour les emissions de France24. Bravo France24, bravo Bernard Couchner! Maintenant je vois que les occidents peuvent etre objectifs. Pas comme a Cossovo. Assez de doubles standards! Le representant de plus paisible metier - prof des langues etrangers, avec meuilleurs salutations et les voeux d etre objectifs - Alexander Larchicov

    Vidéo

    • IN THE FIELD

      "Georgians expect more solidarity from the West", Robert Parsons, France 24 Correspondent, 17/08

    • Special report

      Georgians seek strength in religion
      France 24 special report by George Harris, 17/08

    • IN THE FIELD

      "Tskhinvali is partially destroyed," R. Goguelin in Tskhinvali, 17/08 8am (GMT+2)

    • IN THE FIELD

      "The impression in Georgia is that the Russians don't have the intention to leave," R. Parsons in Tbilisi, 17/08 2 pm (GMT+2)

    • FRANCE 24 REPORT

      As Russians advance into Georgia, terrified resident try to flee. (Report: T.Grucza, N.Ransom) 16/08

    • Peace after the horror

      Report: F. Villeminot, 16/08


 

 

News Briefs
Weather
Currently
  • New York
    Passing clouds.  Chilly.
    3°C
  • Rio de Janeiro
    Passing clouds.  Mild.
    23°C
  • London
    Fog.  Chilly.
    2°C
  • Paris
    Ice fog.  Chilly.
    -2°C
  • Moscow
    Light snow.  Mostly cloudy.  Fri
    -13°C
  • Istanbul
    Scattered clouds.  Nippy.
    6°C
  • Mumbai / Bombay
    Haze.  Refreshingly cool.
    16°C
  • Beijing
    Sunny.  Chilly.
    0°C
  • Tokyo
    Partly sunny.  Cool.
    9°C
  • Shanghai
    Haze.  Nippy.
    7°C
  • Sydney
    Partly sunny.  Mild.
    20°C
  • Johannesburg
    Passing clouds.  Mild.
    23°C