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OSCE Withdraws Mission

DW staff (dfm)December 22, 2008

Europe's OSCE observer mission to Georgia is to be dissolved after Russia blocked a three-month extension of the security agency's mandate in the Caucasus nation at an OSCE meeting in Vienna on Monday.

https://p.dw.com/p/GLYR
OSCE observers monitor the Russian army's evacuation of forward positions in Georgia's Igoeti village
The OSCE mission is monitoring adherence to a ceasefire between Russia and GeorgiaImage: picture-alliance/dpa

Of the 56 OSCE members, Russia was the only nation to vote against prolonging the Georgia mission which was set up to monitor on-the-ground adherence to a European-brokered ceasefire between Russia and Georgia after their brief August war.

Finland, which currently holds the rotating OSCE presidency, had sought to have the Georgia mission revamped to empower it to cross internal conflict lines. The mission has so far been barred from access to the breakaway Georgian region of South Ossetia, over which much of the August war was fought.

"A consensus for a three-month technical extension was not possible today so it means we have to start withdrawing the mission, ceasing activities, on January 1," Finnish official Antti Turunen, permanent ambassador to the Vienna-based OSCE, told reporters Monday, Dec. 22.

Eight of the 28 observers will have to leave from January 1, while the remaining 20 have until February.

The security agency also has a 152-strong mission in Tbilisi which will have to be dissolved until a possible new mandate is decided, diplomats said.

South Ossetian separatist fighters fire Kalashnikovs and wave their white-yellow-red flag while riding in a car in Tskhinvali, the capital of Georgia's separatist-controlled territory of South Ossetia
South Ossetians were supported by Russia in their attempt at independenceImage: AP

Integrity versus independence

Turunen said Russia would have only agreed to an extension of the observer mission's mandate if the organization recognized the independence of South Ossetia and a second rebel region called Abkhazia.

"We had one side defending the territorial integrity of Georgia and the other the 'independence' of South Ossetia. The sides are so far apart it made no sense trying to bridge the gap before Dec. 31," he said.

Only Russia and Nicaragua have recognized the two rebel regions as independent.

US Ambassador Julie Finley said "only one country (was) responsible for this debacle. It is the Russian Federation."

Georgian fury

The Georgian government reacted with anger at the cancelling of the OSCE mission, saying Russia had refused to support an extended mandate to cover up "war crimes."

Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili
Georgian leader Mikhail Saakashvili has strongly opposed independence for the two regionsImage: AP

"Russia is trying to block the OSCE monitoring exercise in South Ossetia because it committed war crimes there, including ethnic cleansing of the Georgian population," Georgia's minister for reintegration, Temur Iakobashvili, told news agency AFP.

"The Kremlin is desperately trying to bring legitimacy to its proxy regimes in South Ossetia and Abkhazia and international organizations are not allowing it to do so."

Russia unmoving on independence

Russian Ambassador Anvar Azimov told reporters the negotiations had stalled because of the West's refusal to accept "the new political reality that exists for us and that is the independence of South Ossetia."

"Russia favours an independent presence of the OSCE in South Ossetia... even if we do not come to a deal, it is no tragedy," he said.