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Aug 16 2008
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By Agencies   

Rice, left, spent five hours with Saakashvili discussing the peace pact [AFP]
Rice, left, spent five hours with Saakashvili discussing the peace pact [AFP]
Russia has assured Condoleeza Rice, the US secretary of state, that it will sign a ceasefire agreement to end its conflict with Georgia, a US official has said.

The news on Saturday came a day after Russia is reported to have made its deepest incursion into Georgian territory since the conflict began last week.

Sergei Lavrov, the Russian foreign minister, said in a phone call to Rice after she left Tbilisi, the Georgian capital, by plane that Moscow would implement the agreement as long as it could see the signature of Mikheil Saakashvili, the Georgian president, on the document first.

Saakashvili earlier signed the pact, brokered by Nicholas Sarkozy, the French president, on behalf of the European Union, following five hours of talks with Rice.

Hundreds of Russian soldiers and more than a dozen armoured personnel carriers are reported to have reached a village 40km away from Tbilisi - the furthest push by Moscow into the country since Georgia launched its attack on the breakaway region of South Ossetia on 7 August.

Saakashvili said Russian tanks had also reached two other towns - Khashari and Borjomi - in central Georgia, which has not been independently confirmed.

Russian forces are reportedly within 40km of the Georgian capital [AFP]
Russian forces are reportedly within 40km of the Georgian capital [AFP]

George Bush, the US president, has denounced Russian's military action in Georgia as being "completely unacceptable to the free nations of the world" and accused Moscow of "bullying and intimidation".

Saakashvili said in a joint news conference with Rice in Tibilisi: "We will never, ever surrender, give up our freedom and territory, we will definitely get rid of these invaders for good. I am totally convinced of that."

He also criticised the West for not granting Georgia Nato membership earlier this year, saying Russia had stepped up its military presence in the region following the decision.

'Difficult dispute'

Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, had earlier secured the agreement of Dmitry Medvedev, the Russian president, to the EU-brokered deal but was told Moscow would guarantee the will of the people in the pro-Russian separatist regions.

Russian troops were reported on Friday to be stationed in Gori, Georgia's second city, the Black Sea port of Poti, and the western town of Zugdidi, which lies near another breakaway region, Abkhazia.

Meanwhile, Viktor Yushchenko, Ukraine's president, has said he had requested urgent talks with Moscow on the Russian navy's use of Sevastopol, a Ukrainian port, as the base for its Black Sea fleet.

Ukraine had said on Thursday it would make Russia seek official permission for movements of its warships based in the former Soviet state despite Moscow's objections.

Cluster bombs

Marc Garlasco, from the New York-based Human Rights Watch organisation, said that both Russia and Georgia were using indiscriminate weapons in the conflict, including cluster bombs.

Rice has called on Russia to start withdrawing from Georgia [Reuters]
Rice has called on Russia to start withdrawing from Georgia [Reuters]

Speaking in Tbilisi, Garlasco said: "We've been very concerned that both sides have not been following the Geneva Conventions, and supporting international humanitarian law here.

"It's quite shocking that in the year that 107 countries have agreed to ban cluster bombs, that the Russians are using them in this conflict now.

"Clearly we need to have some international body come here and do some credible investigation.

"Just to look at statements of casualties – the Russians are claiming 2,000 dead in South Ossetia - our investigation has shown 44 at this point. So we really need to have someone discern what the truth is."

Russian troops entered Georgia following Tbsili's August 7 offensive to retake South Ossetia, which achieved de  facto independence from Georgia in the 1990s during the breakup of  the Soviet Union.

Moscow, which firmly backs South Ossetia and Abkhazia, has issued Russian passports to most people in the two territories.

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Tags:  Georgia Condoleeza Rice Russia
 
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