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Georgia Accuses Russia
of Missile Attack
By Peter Fedynsky
07 August 2007
The former Soviet republic of Georgia is accusing Russia of firing a
missile inside its air space. The weapon apparently did not explode, but
as Peter Fedynsky reports from Moscow, the incident again raises
tensions between Georgia and Russia.
A
Russian Su-24 medium-range bomber, known by NATO as Fencer
Georgia called in the Russian ambassador to Tbilisi to protest the
alleged missile firing and violation of Georgian airspace. A
representative of the country's Interior Ministry, Shota Utiashvili,
said that two Russian planes flew about 60 kilometers into Georgian
airspace. He says the missile landed near the village of Tsitelubani, 60
kilometers from the capital, Tbilisi.
"The missile," says Utiashvili, "landed about 30 meters from the home of
a local resident and created a narrow hole about five-meters deep, but
there were no casualties," he said.
Officials in Russia strongly deny the Georgian accusations.
There were no Russian military flights in the area all day Monday, nor
were there any in the evening, overnight or on Tuesday morning," said
Colonel Alexander Drobyshevsky, a spokesman for the Russian air force.
"The border of the sovereign state of Georgia was not violated."
Georgian
officials examine pieces of a missile, which landed just 25 meters from
a house at the edge of Shavshvebi village in Gori, South Ossetia
Interior Ministry spokesman Utiashvili says the planes flew at high
altitude and their markings
were not visible from the ground. But Georgian Interior Minister Vano
Merabishvili says the planes were identified as Sukhoi-24 attack
aircraft, which entered
Georgian airspace from Russia late
Monday.
eorgian officials are
studying the site where they say the missile landed, which was shown on
television with debris that had Cyrillic lettering.
The alleged missile firing occurred near the rebel Georgian province of
South Ossetia. Officials there are blaming Georgia for staging the
missile launch in an effort to discredit Russia. Georgian leaders accuse
Moscow of supporting South Ossetian separatists.
Relations between Tbilisi and Moscow have become steadily worse since
the 2003 election of Georgian President Mikhail Shaakashvilli, a
pro-Western leader who is seeking closer ties with NATO. |