NEWSGD.COM
Home | About Us | Contact Us | Site Map | Chinese
News | Biz | Pearl River Delta | Enjoy Life | Culture | Travelling | Pics | Cities & Towns | Gov Info | Specials
Home> NewsBrief>World
Russian, French presidents reach new deal on Caucasus
Latest Updated at 2008-September-9 09:10:58
Related News
Georgia formally breaks ties with Russia
Consulate General tightens Russia-Guangdong ties
Medvedev: Russia's recognition over breakaway regions irreversible
Russian Federation
Russian troops start pullout from Georgia
World
U.S. gov't takes over Fannie, Freddie
McCain formally nominated as Republican presidential candidate
Taliban: No plan to kill Chinese hostages
Georgia formally breaks ties with Russia

French President Nicolas Sarkozy (L) and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev meet at a presidential residence outside Moscow, September 8, 2008.(Xinhua Photo)

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and his French counterpart Nicolas Sarkozy reached on Monday a new agreement on the implementation of a French-brokered cease-fire between Russia and Georgia.

NEW WITHDRAWAL DEAL

Georgian troops entered and shelled its breakaway region of South Ossetia on early Aug. 8 in an attempt to regain control there. Russian forces then moved in and drove Georgian troops out of the region that was run by Russian peacekeeping forces.

A French-brokered cease-fire stopped the five-day war on Aug. 12 in which Russia promised to withdraw its troops.

Moscow said earlier it has withdrawn all its troops from Georgia that drove Georgian troops out of South Ossetia during the war, but the West has been pressing Moscow on that.

"Russia is carrying out the cease-fire to the full scale," Medvedev said, claiming that Tbilisi is moving slowly in that aspect.

According to the new agreement read live on local TV channel by the head of state, Moscow agreed to withdraw its troops from the buffer zone around South Ossetia within one month and after international forces were deployed there.

Russia will also remove its checking-points and troops from the Black Sea port of Poti given a non-use-of-force guarantee from Georgia to its nearby breakaway region of Akbhazia, according to the new deal.

Moscow agreed to deploy 200 EU observers to Georgia by Oct. 1 to monitor the withdrawal, and an international conference on the Caucasus situation will be held on Oct. 15 in Geneva.

DISAGREE ON RECOGNITION

Moscow recognized South Ossetia and another breakaway region of Abkhazia as independent states on Aug. 26, a move that further angered the West.

Sarkozy, heading a EU delegation, condemned Russia's recognition of the self-proclaimed Caucasus regions.

"We did not agree on everything. EU condemns the unilateral recognition by Russia to South Ossetia and Akbhazia," he said. "We are not here negotiating the future, but to make sure the cease-fire was and is fully implemented."

Medvedev, in response, said the recognition was "final and irrevocable" and refused to change Russia's stance though its recognition was not broadly echoed in the international community yet.

TENSE IN TIES

Sarkozy arrived in Moscow Monday for talks with Medvedev on the Caucasus situation that was in tense due to the military conflict between Russia and Georgia.

Sarkozy and the EU delegation, including European Commission President Manuel Barroso and foreign policy and security chief Javier Solana, are expected to head for Tbilisi following talks in Moscow.

The Russian-Georgian conflict further dampened Moscow's frozen relations with the West that has promised economic aid for Tbilisi.

The EU postponed talks with Russia on a new partnership agreement and the U.S.-led NATO broke military cooperation with the Kremlin following the conflict.

In fact, observers believe that the fragile Russian-Georgian relations were a result of Tbilisi's bid for NATO membership to which Moscow objects as well as Moscow's support to the pro-Russia breakaway regions.

At the press conference following the talks, Medvedev appreciated EU's mediation, labeling the 27-member bloc a "key partner", but insisted that Moscow's decisions were "the only way to save people."

Editor: Yan

By: Source: China View website

At 226.93 meters, local papercutting breaks world record

Guangdong Hakka Museum opens in Meizhou

1 more Chinese property added to World Heritage List

New Guangdong Provincial Museum to be unveiled next June

Pirates of the Caribbean 3 premieres in China
This site contains material from other media for content enrichment purpose only.
The Southcn.com website do not endorse such content and do not bear the joint responsibility of their copyright infringement.
The views expressed in written material posted to the bulletin boards of Southcn.com are those of the authors and/or publishers. The Southcn.com website does not endorse information products posted by organizations and individuals here. The originators of these information products are solely responsible for their content.
For copyright infringement issues, you shall contact Southcn.com within thirty (30) days. Email: falv@southcn.com
If you find any error in this page, please drag your mouse to mark the text with error, then press "CTRL" and "ENTER", to inform us. Thanks for your help!
Home  |  About Us  |   Contact Us  |  Site Map  |  Chinese
©2005 WWW.NEWSGD.COM. All rights reserved.registered number 020074 Terms of Use | Advertise | ICP Certificate No.B2-20050252
Guangdong Gov Link
Guangdong Gov Brief
State Structure
Guangdong in Brief
Laws & Regulations
Exchange Rate
Guangdong Guide
   
Museum Museum
University University
Eat Eat
Shopping Duting
Night Life Night Life
Weather Weather
Phone No. Phone Num
Consulate Consulate
Airport Airport
Travel Tips Tours Tips