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Kim Sengupta: First war, now anarchy as Russian militias run riot

Thursday, 14 August 2008

The conflict in Georgia appeared to be evolving into a vicious new phase yesterday, with killings, burning and looting by irregular militias coming in behind Russian military columns thrusting from the breakaway province of South Ossetia deep into the country.

George Bush and the Georgian government accused Moscow of breaking the less than 24-hour-old ceasefire, as armed bands of Ossetians, Cossacks and Chechens raided villages around the strategic town of Gori which was taken over by Russian forces in the morning.

Bullet-riddled bodies were seen at three villages, Karaleti, Gavardzhavli and Variani, struck by the militias who appeared to be members of Caucasian groups fighting alongside South Ossetian separatists against Georgian government forces. There were also corpses at Dzardzanis and Kelktsuili. Some of the houses were ablaze and there was widespread evidence of looting.

Shotu Chulukhadze, who had left his home in Variani with six members of his family, said: "They shot dead Vachtang; he was my neighbour. There were four of them in a yellow private car; they stopped at the village and started insulting Vachtang and killed him. Afterwards, they took some things from his house and just drove away."

About 30 villagers from Karaleti and Gavardzhavli were in a lorry on the road to the capital, Tbilisi. Darejan Khuleidze wept as she described how her cousin was murdered. "He was shot in the back; he was just trying to get away and they killed him for nothing. We have now lost everything. We can never go back to our homes as long as those men are there."

Hundreds of terrified refugees fled towards Tbilisi, to escape the roaming gangs, some of them masked, setting fire to buildings and robbing and killing people. Many of the civilians said Russian troops had done nothing to stop the abuse by the militia fighters.

A few hours later, the Russians themselves began to move towards Tbilisi, causing fear in the city, but they halted after 18 miles. Although there was initial relief in the capital, which had been bracing itself for occupation, the manoeuvre has effectively bisected Georgia east to west, leaving Moscow in control of movement between the two regions as well as a pipeline supplying oil to western Europe.

Georgia's President, Mikheil Saak-ashvili, accused the Russians of blatantly breaching the ceasefire agreement and accused Western nations of failing his country. "I feel that they are partly to blame," he said. "Not only those who commit atrocities are responsible, but so are those who fail to react."

The day had started with a Russian column entering Gori, the biggest city across the border from South Ossetia, abandoned by the Georgian army on Monday. At first, there was relative calm inside the near-deserted city, which had come under sustained attacks from the Russians in the hours before the ceasefire. Russian troops set up checkpoints and a contingent moved to a Georgian army base and took arms and ammunition, then the building was set on fire. It was unclear whether this was done by regular Russian forces or militias.

Soon, reports began to surface about atrocities in the surrounding countryside. But people injured by the militias no longer have anywhere to go for treatment after the staff at Gori hospital were evacuated. A 28-year-old surgeon, Georgi Abramishvili, was killed in a Russian missile strike at the hospital on Tuesday, and the dean, Professor Gurami Guasalia decided it was too risky. He said: "I know there are a lot of people injured in the villages, but what can I do? I have responsibility towards my staff as well."

Russian officers were guarded about their mission. But one of them, Captain Pavl Baskarov, said: "We tried to find and talk to Georgian officials in Gori but couldn't find any." Asked about the abuse of civilians by militias, he said: "I do not know about that, but I am sure if people have committed crimes they will be punished."

Human Rights Watch reported "terrifying scenes of destruction" in ethnic Georgian villages inside South Ossetia. In the village of Nizhnie Achaveti, researchers spoke to an elderly man who said the South Ossetian militia had set his house on fire. The man said he had no food or water; his hands were burnt and hair singed from trying to extinguish the blaze. He said there were about five to 10 elderly and sick people left in the village, all in a desperate condition.

The Georgian government also accused the Russians of breaching a cease-fire agreement in the west of the country by driving out Georgian troops from the other separatist region, Abkhazia.

The global perspective

John McCain Republican presidential candidate

"I'm not saying we are reigniting the Cold War but this is an act of aggression which we didn't think we'd see in the 21st century... of course we have to deal with Russia and deal with Putin. But it has to be on a very realistic basis.

"I think it's very clear that Russian ambitions are to restore the old Russian Empire. Not the Soviet Union, but the Russian Empire... Russia no longer shares any of the values and principles of the G8, so they should be excluded."

Mikhail Gorbachev Last president of the Soviet Union

"By declaring the Caucasus – a region that is thousands of miles from the American continent – a sphere of its 'national interest', the United States made a serious blunder.

"Of course, peace in the Caucasus is in the interest of everyone. But it is simply common sense to recognise that Russia is rooted in the region by common geography and centuries of history.

"Russia is not seeking territorial expansion, but it has legitimate interests in this region."

Craig Murray Former British ambassador to Uzbekistan

"Russia's actions are illegal [but] the US andUK, who launched an equally illegal and much more devastating invasion of Iraq, are ill-placed to be outraged... A de facto Russian annexation of South Ossetia must not be permitted, unless we eventually want a war for East Ukraine.

"Nato is part of the cause of the problem, not the solution. By encircling and humiliating Russia, Nato has created the climate in Russia so favourable to Putin."

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Comments

137 Comments

To Dan:

"The US and UK along with Australia, went into Iraq under a UN mandate. Russia did not enter Georgia under a UN mandate."

You are wrong, the 2nd Iraq war was illegal:
"On September 16, 2004 Kofi Annan, the Secretary General of the United Nations, said of the invasion, "I have indicated it was not in conformity with the U.N. charter. From our point of view, from the charter point of view, it was illegal."

And the US broke international law again when they recognized Kosovo's independence from Serbia.

therefore, the Russians are really just following the US example, the west has no moral authority to denounce Russia, they are just as bad

Jorge

Posted by Jorge | 19.08.08, 03:26 GMT

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The Russians are spoiling for a fight after their ignominious breakup. Don't trust these dull, dangerous types. They silently hate the free world. Georgia is just a sign of things to come. A flexing of muscle. Testing the resolve of the West.

Dare one say.."The war to end all wars" hasn't happened yet?

Posted by Tred | 18.08.08, 08:36 GMT

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July 31 , joint US , Georgian military exercices did end. 1000 american troops did participate in the joint exercice. 8 days later the Georgian troops atacked. Russia dis not like its troops got overrun by the Georgians. For 200 years Georgia was part of the russian empire. For the last years america has been humiliating russia. The expansion of nato was one example, the building of military aliance with Georgia another example..., an anti missile shield in eastern Europe another example....This time Russia did strike back.

Posted by Peter42y | 16.08.08, 05:48 GMT

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MEDEVEV looks like a idiot..GEORGE BUSH looks brilliant compared to hollow medevev...medevev is PUTINS play toy..puppet medevev lol.

Posted by bob | 15.08.08, 21:31 GMT

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This is a Teddy Roosevelt moment for the US.

George Bush should speak quietly with Putin...give him a timeline for withdrawal, 48 hours seems reasonable.

If Putin does not budge we should use the US airforce to shock and awe Russian tanks and troops.

Now is the time to show the world that we are simply not going to stand idle and allow a democratic ally to be trampled on.

Posted by keiker | 15.08.08, 21:28 GMT

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JASPER, US and UK did not save Russia in WW2. In fact, THEY DID SAVE RUSSIA....they intentionally let the Germans and Russians weaken one another. As a result, Russia suffered by far the most losses in WW2.
lol yes they let them weaken each other lol.. RUSSIANS DIED FROM FOOLISH LEADRERS AND BLUNDERS OF MILITARY OPERATIONS...AND you havnt seen the interview with the inventer of ak-47 he directly states he has guilt over the ak-47 sold and used by people in other countries who kill daily



Posted by bob | 15.08.08, 21:28 GMT

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Peter Atwood u are a liar


1. Saddam Hussein did nothing to Americans or anyone else outside his own country before that invasion.
Truth: Ever heard of Kuwait or Iran? Also, genocide by chemical warfare despite the fact that it is within your own soverign nation doesn't fly in the 21st century.

2.Tom has forgotten what was discussed about inspectors in Iraq before the invasion - they were in already. The discussion concerned letting them stay and finish inspecting.

Truth: He kicked the weapons inspectors out and before he did he constantly denid them access to inspect what they wanted.
Which really means there was very little inspecting going on.

3.killing a million others.
The U.S. has not killed a million people in Iraq!!!

I'm thinking that when you have to invent your own "facts" and ignore real ones, that's a sign of trouble with your thinking.

Posted by David | 15.08.08, 17:26 GMT

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The Europeans are impotent. They are all talk. Only the U.S. and in particular, President Bush, has any strength to defend the West from aggression, be it from radical islam or naked Russian aggression. As an American, I am about ready to let them be overrun by islamists and whomever else wants to enslave and rule them.




Posted by Gary | 15.08.08, 16:48 GMT

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I cannot disagree more with Craig Murray, there is no comparison with Iraq. The Iraq invasion was the culmination of over a year of discussions with Sadaam Hussein about allowing weapons inspectors into his country, with him thumbing his nose at the UN. There were plenty of UN resolutions that continued to escalate the consequences for Iraq if it continued to pursue its lack of cooperation. There was intelligence at the time (granted it has now been proven incorrect) that Iraq was stockpiling WMDs for use against its neighbors. The US stepped up to enforce the UN's resolution, along with a coalition of countries from around the world that understood that leaving Sadaam in power threatened our resolve to deal with terrorism. Russia's invasion was not vetted through the UN, and there was no coalition of the willing. Georgia's assertion of its sovereignty over the breakaway republic of Ossetia didn't threaten anyone outside of the country.

Posted by Tom | 15.08.08, 16:14 GMT

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Bob, US and UK did not save Russia in WW2. In fact, they intentionally let the Germans and Russians weaken one another. As a result, Russia suffered by far the most losses in WW2.

And the inventor of the AK-47 did not say he regretted making it; I've read interviews with him where he specifically said he does not regret making it because it saved his country which was technologically far behind in weaponry. So I don't know where you get your info from, but you seem to just be straight anti-Russian which is a very stupid position to hold.

Posted by Jasper | 15.08.08, 15:52 GMT

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137 Comments