The FINANCIAL — According to Guardian, Georgia said on August 24 that it would appeal to the international community this week to pressure Russia to end its "occupation", adding that Russian troops were now digging in across the country in violation of the ceasefire deal.
Russian soldiers established about 25 checkpoints over the weekend, including some outside the original conflict zone and in areas adjacent to the borders of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, Georgian officials said. Russia said its troops were no longer an occupying force but merely performing peacekeeping operations. It added that it could keep soldiers on Georgian territory under an agreement following civil wars in both breakaway republics in the early 90s.
Georgia said the troops' presence on its territory was illegal. "Russia has no right to establish checkpoints in Georgia. The ceasefire agreement is the only agreement that is still alive. All others are broken," interior ministry spokesman Shota Utiashviavi told the Guardian.
He added: "Georgia considers this as a continuation of occupation. They have just changed their helmets. Georgia will continue to observe the ceasefire and launch international diplomatic initiatives to force Russia to keep its word."
French president Nicolas Sarkozy signalled continuing European dismay at the situation by announcing a special meeting devoted to Georgia for next Monday at which the EU will consider future relations with Moscow.
Also yesterday, firefighters tried to extinguish a blaze on a railway line near Gori – caused when a train carrying crude oil from Kazakhstan rolled over a mine. Twelve tanker cars slithered off the line.
Georgian officials said the attack was the latest attempt by Russia to destroy its infrastructure and to stop the transit through Georgia of oil from Azerbaijan and other Caspian Sea nations. A large artillery shell had been wedged under the tracks and hidden by stones, Georgian investigators said.
Under the ceasefire deal brokered by Sarkozy, Russia is obliged to withdraw its forces to their pre-August 7 positions – before Georgia launched its brief, disastrous incursion into rebel-held South Ossetia. On Saturday, however, the deputy chief of Russia's army, Colonel General Anatoly Nogovitsyn, said this wouldn't happen. Instead, he unveiled a comprehensive network of new checkpoints leaving Russia in control of Georgia's strategic road links and the Black Sea port of Poti.
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