blogs  
 
yournews
   
 
Video Photos Finance Travel Weather Discussion TV Shows
| |
 
  Home ›
 
World News

 

South Ossetian leader backtracks on Russia unity claims
Posted: 11 September 2008 1936 hrs

  Eduard Kokoity (file pic)
 
Photos  of

   
 
Related News
South Ossetia will join Russia, says rebel leader
Georgia accuses Russia of breaking truce
Russia tightens grip on Georgia regions
Russia pledges bases, troops for rebel Georgian regions


MOSCOW: South Ossetia's separatist leader backtracked on Thursday after initially saying his region would become part of Russia in the wake of last month's conflict in Georgia.

"Of course we will become part of Russia. We're not intending to set up some independent Ossetia," Eduard Kokoity had been quoted as saying by the Russian news agency Interfax.

However, Kokoity later said his comments – made during a meeting of a Kremlin discussion group in the southern Russian Black Sea city of Sochi – had been misunderstood.

"We are not planning to give up our independence, achieved at the cost of colossal casualties, and South Ossetia is not planning to join Russia," Kokoity said, again quoted by Interfax.

Although many in the territory talk about unification with Russian North Ossetia, the territory "intends to build civilized international relations with all states within the framework of international law", he said.

It was a Georgian military assault on August 7 to regain control of South Ossetia from Moscow-backed separatists that sparked the full-blown five-day war between Georgia and Russia last month.

Hundreds of people are estimated to have been killed.

After routing the Georgian army with its overwhelming military superiority, Moscow enraged the West a couple of weeks later by recognising the independence of South Ossetia and a second breakaway Georgian region, Abkhazia.

Abkhazia's leadership has always said it wants to remain formally independent from Russia, but Kokoity's remarks on Thursday were his clearest statement yet that South Ossetia hopes to one day become part of Russia.

South Ossetia's ethnic kin inhabit the Russian province of North Ossetia just across the internationally recognised border between Russia and Georgia. There are strong trade and family ties between the two halves of Ossetia.


- AFP/so

 


Other world News
Blasts rock Syria's Aleppo, tanks enter Homs
Europe's Danube freezes over, cold snap toll at 460
Obama hails Italian PM in talks on euro crisis
Argentina to lodge Falklands protest at UN Friday
Palestinian leadership backs Fatah-Hamas Doha deal
British Islamists jailed for plotting terror attacks
Britain to defend Falklands right to self-determination: PM
US approves first nuclear plant in decades
US says it has not seen Egypt charges against NGO staff
Algeria's president sets May parliament polls
Steve Jobs' unflattering FBI files released
Cautious welcome for UN-Arab League mission in Syria
Obama to meet Italian PM on euro crisis
Syria unrest death toll rises
Syria's Homs under new deadly blitz

 

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions