Venäjä nakertaa lisää Georgiaa vetämällä uutta raja-aitaa keskelle itsenäistä maata. Piikkilankaa nousee etelä-ossetian ja Georgian väliin, mitä nyt vähän menee raja eteenpäin, koska ei ole niin tarkkaa se linjan veto-. Ketään ei kiinnosta.
Osoittaa että voi tehdä mitä haluaa itsenäisessä maassa, eikä nyt riitä maailman huomio. Sopii myös hyvin spekulaatioihin venäjän toimista kun eurooppa on omissa kriiseissään. Silloin on helppo toimia.
http://agenda.ge/news/38872/eng
Hiukka ovat kuitenkin harmistuneet Georgiassa!
http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/...claims-more-of-georgias-territory/525487.html
Breakway Republic of South Ossetia Claims More of Georgia's Territory
Kazbek Basaev / ReutersServicemen of the military forces of South Ossetia attend an oath of allegiance ceremony in Tskhinvali, the capital of the breakaway region of South Ossetia, Georgia, July 5, 2015.
Georgia has accused Russia of expanding the territory of the Moscow-backed breakaway republic of South Ossetia by illegally installing new border demarcation signs along the region's border.
The signs, which were installed in the Tskhinvali district, were a “provocation” by “Russian occupation forces,” the Georgian Foreign Ministry said in a statement over the weekend.
The statement accused Moscow of a “gross violation of the fundamental principles on international law” by “illegally” installing the signs on Friday.
The installation expanded the area of South Ossetia, appearing to give it control over a section of the BP-operated Baku–Supsa oil pipeline, Georgia's Agenda.ge reported.
The new delineation, carried out by Russian border guard troops and South Ossetian forces, also carved up farm fields, causing Georgian farmers to discover that 10 hectares of their land was cut off from their control overnight, the Kavkazsky Uzel news portal reported. Troops warned farmers that they would not be able to harvest the fields where they had sown crops, the report added.
Disputes about the status of South Ossetia and another separatist region, Abkhazia, prompted a war between Russia and Georgia in 2008, after a period of deteriorating relations between Moscow and the government in Tbilisi.
Russia recognizes both regions as independent states, but an agreement signed by Russian President Vladimir Putin this year nearly completely integrates South Ossetia with Russia.
The deal prompted concerns in Tbilisi and the West, coming a year after Moscow annexed Crimea from Ukraine.
Tbilisi will raise the border sign issue with the United Nations, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, and other international agencies, the Foreign Ministry said in its statement.
Zurab Abashidze, the head of the Russian relations department in Georgia's cabinet, said Sunday that his government is occasionally accused of failing to accomplish anything by its protests, news agency Interfax reported.
“But Russia is paying a very high price for its policies,” Abashidze was quoted as saying. “We must carry our truth everywhere.”