GEORGIA: President Saakashvili visits a military cemetery on the first anniversary of Russia-Georgia war
Record ID:
572715
GEORGIA: President Saakashvili visits a military cemetery on the first anniversary of Russia-Georgia war
- Title: GEORGIA: President Saakashvili visits a military cemetery on the first anniversary of Russia-Georgia war
- Date: 8th August 2009
- Summary: TBILISI, GEORGIA (AUGUST 7, 2009) (REUTERS) ENTRANCE TO MILITARY CEMETERY HONOUR GUARDS HONOUR GUARDS IN FRONT OF MEMORIAL TO SOLDIERS KILLED IN 2008 WAR VARIOUS OF GEORGIAN PRESIDENT MIKHEIL SAAKASHVILI AND PARLIAMENT SPEAKER DAVID BAKRADZE TAKING PART IN WREATH-LAYING CEREMONY HONOUR GUARDS LAYING WREATH TO MEMORIAL, SAAKASHVILI WATCHING SOLDIERS WITH GEORGIAN FLAGS SAAKASHVILI ARRANGING RIBBON ON WREATH WREATH VARIOUS OF SAAKASHVILI STANDING BY MEMORIAL, LISTENING TO ANTHEM RELATIVES OF SOLDIERS HONOUR GUARDS SHOOTING SALUTE SAAKASHVILI APPROACHING RELATIVES, SHAKING HANDS, KISSING OLD LADY
- Embargoed: 23rd August 2009 13:00
- Keywords:
- Location: Georgia
- Country: Georgia
- Topics: International Relations
- Reuters ID: LVAA3Z63V9ESMETI6QJZRAHQEI9
- Story Text: As Georgia marked the first anniversary of the five-day war with Russia on Friday (August 7), President Mikheil Saakashvili visited a military cemetery to meet bereaved relatives of Georgian army soldiers killed during the the August 2008 fighting in breakaway South Ossetia.
The pro-Western former Soviet republic launched an assault on South Ossetia late on Aug. 7 after days of clashes with separatists and years of escalating tension with Moscow, drawing a devastating Russian counter-strike that ended on Aug. 12.
The war killed at least 390 civilians and at its height displaced more than 100,000. A year on, an unfulfilled ceasefire pact, sporadic gunfire and the withdrawal of monitors from Georgia's two rebel regions keep alive the risk of renewed war.
There have been a series of competing ceremonies on Friday (August 7) in both Georgia and rebel Ossetia, including a show of midnight bonfires in the Georgian capital and other towns In the military cemetery in Tbillisi, those who gathered to remember their slain loved ones had a mix of emotions.
"It is a very difficult day and at the same time I am very happy that I was a wife of a hero and that I am bringing up the hero's children," said Leila Khasaya, widow of a soldier who died in last year's war.
Some grieving saw the death of their loved ones as a sacrifice for Georgia's unity.
"This day when we remember our heroes, who gave their lives, who sacrificed themselves for the unity of this country, is a very tragic day for all of us," said Georgian opposition leader, Irakly Alasaniya, who met bereaved families at the memorial ceremony in Tbilisi military cemetery.
Conflicting narratives of the war persist.
Russia blames the "aggression" of Saakashvili and his U.S.-trained army, and says it fought to defend Russian peacekeepers and civilians holding Russian passports.
Georgia says Russia had already invaded when it launched the assault on South Ossetia, a charge Moscow dismissed as absurd. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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