|
SOUTH OSSETIA: THORN IN GEORGIA'S
SIDE
By Virginia Gidley-Kitchin
August 19, 2004 - (BBC News) South Ossetia has been
a de-facto independent region of Georgia since the collapse of the
Soviet Union in 1991.
But earlier this year the newly elected Georgian
President, Mikhail Saakashvili, pledged to bring it back under central
control. Since then, tensions and clashes between Georgian and South
Ossetian forces have escalated, and now there are fears the situation
might descend into all-out war.
There are also fears that this could also jeopardise
a strategic oil pipeline that crosses the region.
South Ossetians strongly oppose Mr Saakashvili's
vision for their reintegration into Georgia proper.
"We want to live with Russia - we don't want
to live with Georgia any more," said a woman in a market in
South Ossetia's main city Tskhinvali.
"This is the third time they've launched a
genocide against us. We don't even buy food in the market from Georgians
any more."
Another woman recalls how the first war the Georgians
fought in the region was "terrifying".
"It was the Russian soldiers that defended
us then and brought peace back," she said. "We've been
living as Russians ever since. We hope they'll come and defend us
again."
Ceasefire broken
South Ossetia is inhabited mostly by ethnic Ossetians,
who speak a language slightly related to Persian, while Georgians
are in a minority.
Officially at least, the region is part of Georgia, but it borders
North Ossetia, which is part of Russia.
A decade ago, with some Russian support, the South
Ossetians effectively broke away from Georgia. Peace was restored
by a 1992 agreement on the deployment there of Georgian, Ossetian
and Russian peacekeepers.
But in recent weeks, violence has erupted again.
Overnight shelling and gunfire has already breached a ceasefire
accord reached last week, and both sides now fear all-out war.
The Georgian Foreign Minister, Salome Zourabichvili,
who is currently at the Organisation for Security and Co-operation
in Europe (OSCE) in Vienna, has called for more international involvement
to resolve the conflict.
"We have been calling repeatedly for dialogue
with the separatists," she said. "We have asked repeatedly.
The prime minister has asked for direct talks but has not yet had
an answer.
"We have been asking for high-level political
dialogue with the Russians on this question and we've been asking
for increased monitoring by the OSCE, which is indispensable if
we want to get demilitarisation with a very high degree of autonomy,
federal structures."
Russia, sensitive about the growing US influence
in Georgia since Mr Saakashvili's election in January, has rejected
increased international involvement in the conflict.
But why is Mr Saakashvili so insistent on getting
South Ossetia back under Georgian control anyway?
Ms Zourabichvili says it is not a case of bringing
it "back under control", but more a desire to reunite
the country.
"It's very difficult for a democratic country,
a fragile and new democratic country, that is developing its economy,
to have on its border corrupted regions that are lawless and escape
all types of control and where all types of trafficking are happening,"
she said.
Pipeline fears
The minister said the Georgian government had made
many gestures to show the South Ossetians that it did not want to
restrict their rights or limit their autonomy.
She says people there think that events are starting
to come to a climax.
"It's interesting that passions are very high
in Tbilisi in Georgia, on the Georgian side," she said.
"But here in South Ossetia, people are equally
adamant that they know exactly what they want, and they are prepared
to fight for it. They say that South Ossetia wants to belong to
Russia, it wants full independence. They call Georgia aggressors."
The tension is causing growing concern to the US,
which is training Georgian troops and helping to build a strategic
oil pipeline across the country.
The pipeline, due to open next year, is intended
to carry up to one million barrels of oil a day to western markets
from Azerbaijan via Georgia to a Turkish port in the Mediterranean.
On Monday, US Secretary of State Colin Powell urged
Russia to ease tensions with Georgia over South Ossetia. A State
Department spokesman said clashes would threaten the pipeline's
future.
From: http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/europe/3579038.stm
|