Georgian authorities intend to investigate the complicity of certain
high-ranking officials, including President Mikhail Saakashvili, for
possible war crimes that took place during the August 2008 war in South
Ossetia.
Georgian Justice Minister Teya Tsulukiani has told the press
that some Georgian citizens and representatives of foreign NGOs had
complained to the International Court of Justice in The Hague about
alleged war crimes committed by Georgian officials during the 2008
military conflict with South Ossetia.
However, Tsulukiani said that the Georgian authorities were
determined to try the case domestically in order that for it not to
require the involvement of international courts.
“We must investigate our problems ourselves. My objective and
the objective of the Prosecutor-General is to investigate these
events by ourselves. If we fail to do so, the
case would be heard on the international level and I do not think
that such outcome is desirable for the Georgian people,”
Tsulukiani told reporters.
The official did not exclude the possibility that Georgian
President Mikhail Saakashvili would have to testify in the
investigation. At the same time, she noted that by the time of the
questioning Saakashvili’s presidential term would likely be
over.
Tsulukianui added that other top-ranking officials could face
questioning “without regard to their nationality or ethnic
origin,”
Saakashvili’s second and final presidential term expires in
October this year.
Georgian Prime Minister Bidzina Ivanishvili has said that in his
opinion, an investigation of the 2008 war could only help Georgia’s
reputation, that the reasoning behind many Georgian actions in the
war remained unclear to this day, and that society has the right to
know the truth.
The Georgian army launched a full-scale attack on the capital of
the breakaway republic of South Ossetia on August 8, 2008,
violating a truce and killing Russian citizens and peacekeepers
stationed in the city under the mandate of the Commonwealth of
Independent States. The Russian military intervened, and within
five days the conflict was over. In late August, Russia recognized
the independence of South Ossetia and another breakaway republic,
Abkhazia.
In September 2009, an international commission backed by the
European Union completed its probe into the August conflict and
published a report stating that the military incident was initiated
by Georgia, that the Georgian side had no right to attack Russian
peacekeepers, and that Russia’s reciprocal use of force was
entirely lawful.
http://rt.com/politics/part-war-2008-investigation-618/
No comments:
Post a Comment