Sunday, January 18, 2009
Georgian policeman was shot dead on the border with separatist South Ossetia
For the incident occurred in the village Knolewi at the south-eastern border of South Ossetia. Shot with a professional carbine came equipped with a silencer from ossetians. But Ossetians argue that their troops stationed a few kilometers from the border with Georgia and "not have a gun, which could give a shot from the customs such a distance."
Command of Russian contingent stationed in South Ossetia also argues that none of the Russian troops did not participate in the incident. Cchinwali the garrison commander Anatoly Tarasow And their subordinates to increase the number of patrols in the buffer zone to prevent any exchange of fire between Ossetians and Georgians.
Minister for Foreign Affairs of Russia said that the death of a police officer is another provocation from Georgia. Sergei Merriam added that if Georgians complete sections of the ceasefire agreement and did not leave their posts, did not lead to such incidents.
Georgia is guilty of genocide
”Georgia has exposed South Ossetia to a very crude and cynical aggression. People have died. Russian citizens have died, including local residents and peacekeepers. The actions of the Georgian side cannot be described as anything else but genocide.
“The information we have received suggests that horrible crimes were committed there. People were killed, burnt, run down by tanks, had their throats were cut,” Medvedev said.
The President went on to say that “the operation to restore peace will continue and those guilty will be punished”.
Earlier, after visiting a refugee camp in North Ossetia, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin also accused Georgia of genocide and said those responsible for war crimes should be prosecuted.
Thursday, January 8, 2009
Comment of the Press and Information Department regarding Dutch TV false report on Russian invasion of Georgia
On January 3, 2009, the Dutch television station NOS in its programme NOS Journaal broadcast a false and misleading report on Russia’s invasion of Georgia last August.
The segment featured a Georgian woman, Nino Matkava, who was said to have served on the front lines in South Ossetia. In the report, the Dutch correspondent, Kiesje Hekstra, asserts that Georgian President Saakashvili "started” the war. She adds: "He viewed the war as a game, a game in which Nino and others like her were jeopardizing their lives.”
The report relied on the emotional impact of Ms. Matkava's experience in the war. However, Ms. Matkava was not serving in the Georgian military at the time of the invasion. In fact, she was nowhere near the front lines and thus was in no position to provide any information on the events surrounding the invasion. Ms. Matkava served as a command unit target operator of Georgian Armed Forces and was dismissed on June 12, 2006 due to the violation of the contract conditions. Furthermore, the Dutch broadcast offered no other credible information to back its assertion
The Ambassador of Georgia to the Netherlands has brought these details to the attention of the Dutch broadcaster and formally requested an on-air retraction of the report. The Ambassador also urged the station to investigate how the report came to be aired; it was filed by the station's Moscow correspondent, thus casting doubt on her professionalism as a journalist.
This report is the latest in what appears to be a systematic campaign of disinformation by Russia that aims to manipulate international opinion on the origins of the Russian invasion.
The most egregious falsehood promoted by Moscow—and its initial premise for invading Georgia—was that over 2,100 South Ossetian civilians had been killed by Georgian forces before Russia’s invasion. Just last week, Russia’s own Prosecutor-General, Alexander Bastrykin, "revised” this number down to 162—including civilians on both sides killed before and after the invasion.
Russia has made numerous other efforts to manipulate Western political and public opinion. For instance, the Associated Press reported last month that a supposed South Ossetian NGO activist who had made searing allegations against Georgia was in fact linked to Russian intelligence services. Moscow also has promoted the claims of a former OSCE monitor, Ryan Grist, who asserted Georgian culpability in triggering the August war; however, he himself revealed to the Wall Street Journal last month that his claims had been taken too far and that he had been dismissed from the OSCE for misconduct.
Monday, January 5, 2009
Georgia-US partnership Charter to be signed on January 9
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Georgian Foreign Minister Grigol Vashadze will sign the document soon. Georgian minister Grigol Vashadze and the ambassador Batu Kutelia are already in Washington preparing for the ceremony.
The strategic partnership charter envisages expansion of partnership and cooperation between the two countries in the fields of defense, security, economy, energy, democratic reforms, diplomacy and culture.
Foreign Ministry of Georgia releases special statement
The Foreign Ministry of Georgia has released a special statement on attacking the Georgian checkpoints by Russian occupants in Ganmukhuri village, Gali district:
``From the occupied territories, impudent attacks are being implemented by Russia and its marionette regimes that aim to provoke the Georgian side and tense the situation in the region. To prevent the danger, first of all, efficient international monitoring should be implemented in the occupied regions. International monitors should be allowed to completely freely move across the whole territory of Georgia and first of all in the occupied regions and fulfill the functions stipulated by their mandate without hindrance. The Georgian side underlines again that putting the efficient mechanisms into action in time would be crucial.``
Saturday, January 3, 2009
Georgian IDPs from Gori bombed in Israel
03.01.09 16:51
Georgian IDPs repatriated to Israel from Georgia during the Russian intervention have again suffered from hail bombs. During the Russian -Georgia war a part of the evacuated population from the conflict zone were settled in the southern Israel that is being continuously bombed by the Hamas terrorists. Two families of IDPs from Gori district have been settled in Ashdod city where Palestinians threw missiles four days ago. Seventeen persons have been injured in result. The IDPs from Gori say they feel shocked again after the four-month repatriation.