![The decision to evacuate children came after an eruption of violence on Friday [AFP] The decision to evacuate children came after an eruption of violence on Friday [AFP]](http://mwcnews.net/images/stories/Europe/a/1/2/Ossetia-children.jpg) | | The decision to evacuate children came after an eruption of violence on Friday [AFP] | Georgian and South Ossetian officials have agreed to hold direct talks on Thursday for the first time in a decade amid tensions in the mountain province.
"There is an agreement to hold a meeting in Tskhinvali on August 7," Marina Salukvadze, the reintegration minister's spokeswoman said, referring to the capital of unrecognised South Ossetia. In a separate development, Georgia's foreign ministry said the Georgian deputy foreign minister will meet his Russian counterpart in Moscow later this week to discuss the situation in South Ossetia. The move comes after a senior Russian diplomat warned Moscow would defend Russian citizens living in South Ossetia, while a South Ossetian official said militias in the region were preparing for war. South Ossetia has evacuated hundreds of women and children to Russia over the past few days after six people were killed on Friday by sniper and mortar fire from Georgian positions, the breakaway province's government said. Georgia has denied readying for war and said there is no major evacuation. Russian support South Ossetia broke away from the rest of Georgia after the Soviet collapse of 1991 in a conflict that killed thousands of people. Russia has given the separatist province diplomatic and economic support, including granting citizenship to most of its residents. "If events develop in the worst possible way, with the use of force, Russia will not be able to stand by, seeing as Russian citizens live in South Ossetia," Yury Popov, the Russian ambassador at large, said. Tensions between Georgia and Russia over South Ossetia and another breakaway Georgian region, Abkhazia, have soared in recent months since Moscow announced it was boosting ties with the separatists. Meanwhile, South Ossetian officials said militia volunteers from southern Russia were beginning to arrive in the separatist province in preparation for a possible conflict. Dmitry Medoyev, a spokesman for South Ossetia's leadership, said in Moscow: "We are getting offers of help from the north Caucasus and from the Cossacks of southern Russia." Medoyev also said that South Ossetia could block oil shipments through Georgia in the event of conflict, without giving further details.
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Tags: Georgia S Ossetia
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