The UN Security Council adopted a resolution on Abkhazia on October 13 calling on Georgia to refrain from “provocative actions, especially in upper Kodori” Gorge, and noting the Russian peacekeeping troops’ important “stabilizing role” in the Abkhaz conflict zone. “The first is an unconditional denunciation of the Georgian police operation in upper Kodori Gorge that would have a serious legal force; and the second, the restoration of the status quo that existed in the gorge prior to this operation. This would have meant the withdrawal of the legitimate Abkhaz authorities from Kodori Gorge and the renaming of Kodori Gorge,” Saakashvili said. Georgia sent troops to upper Kodori in late July, cracked down on militias there and fully restored the central authorities control over this area of breakaway region. The move was condemned by Sokhumi and Moscow as a provocation. The resolution expresses concern over “the actions of the Georgian side in the Kodori Valley in July” and “urges the Georgian side to address seriously legitimate Abkhaz security concerns, to avoid steps which could be seen as threatening and to refrain from militant rhetoric.” Georgia’s UN Ambassador Irakli Alasania said that the police operation in upper Kodori was needed to restore order and security in order to allow UN Observers to monitor the area as is laid out in the 1994 Moscow cease-fire agreement. The monitoring was suspended in June 2003 when UN observers and their interpreter were kidnapped by gunmen while patrolling the gorge. A joint patrol of Russian peacekeepers and UN observers monitored the upper part of Kodori on October 12 and found a 550-strong Georgian Interior Ministry police force. The presence of regular Defense Ministry troops is banned by the 1994 Moscow agreement in the upper Kodori Gorge. The UN Security Council resolution also reaffirms the commitment “to the sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity of Georgia within its internationally recognized borders” and again expresses support towards the principles contained in the “Paper on Basic Principles for the Distribution of Competencies between Tbilisi and Sukhumi.” This so-called “Boden Document” envisages broad autonomy of Abkhazia within Georgia. The resolution also calls for a highest-level meeting between the conflicting sides “without preconditions” and for the finalization of documents on the non-use of violence and on the return of refugees and internally displaced persons to the Gali district. In his address to the UN General Assembly Session on September 22, President Saakashvili made it clear that Tbilisi will sign an agreement on the non-resumption of hostilities only after the Russian peacekeeping forces in the conflict zone are replaced by a multinational police force. The resolution also calls on the Abkhaz side “to address seriously the need for a dignified return of IDPs and refugees, including their security and human rights concerns” and to agree on the deployment of a UN police component in the Gali district of the breakaway territory. |
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