- published: 14 Nov 2011
- views: 14593
29:08
PLACES THAT DONT EXIST: SOUTH OSSETIA (episode 3 of 5)
Please visit www.simonreeve.co.uk for more information.
Simon Reeve travels to a group of...
published: 14 Nov 2011
PLACES THAT DONT EXIST: SOUTH OSSETIA (episode 3 of 5)
Please visit www.simonreeve.co.uk for more information.
Simon Reeve travels to a group of unrecognised nations -- countries so obscure they don't officially exist -- in this five-part BBC TV series, shown on BBC2, BBC World and by broadcasters in more than 40 countries.
On his journey he visits little-known parts of the world including Somaliland, Transniestria, Nagorno-Karabakh, Ajaria, South Ossetia, Azerbaijan, Armenia, Somalia, Moldova, Taiwan, and the former Soviet republic of Georgia.
In this series, Simon Reeve is taught to fish by the President of Moldova, becomes an unofficial Somali diplomat, and finds himself crammed into a lift with the President of Georgia.
He visits a little-known country stuck in a Soviet-era time-warp, and a mountainous state which claims to have the highest rate of longevity on the planet. Simon also discovers abandoned missiles capable of destroying skyscrapers, al Qaeda terrorists in an African jail and the mass graves of children killed by soldiers.
Simon meets a blonde popstar who's a crackshot with an AK-47, a mournful guitarist, and a Taiwanese boy band. He climbs the world's tallest building, visits the site of the battle in Black Hawk Down, is electrocuted in Mogadishu, finds 5,000 year old rock paintings, buys himself a new Somali passport from a man called Mr Big Beard, and is held as a spy by the Transniestrian KGB.
Snake blood is on the menu in Asia, rock-hard yoghurt in the Caucuses, camel milk in Africa and two bottles of cognac when Simon is forced to celebrate independence with a Communist politician.
He meets a villager who sold a kidney to buy a cow, and children forced to live in freezing railway carriages. Amid the minefields of Nagorno-Karabkh, Simon is pelted with snowballs by refugee children. But in the sweltering heat of Mogadishu he needs a dozen armed gunmen just to stay alive.
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Reviews of the series:
Daily Telegraph: An 'exemplary series...riveting...eye-opening...remarkable...superb'
Evening Standard (London): 'Compelling television, lifted way above a worthy travelogue by Reeve's obvious, sincere interest in the people and places he encounters'
Daily Mail: "Unmissable...makes the blood boil...It would be good if this brave programme stirred a few consciences. Shaming."
The Times: A 'consistently informative series...Reeve is an ideal guide -- brave without being macho, amused without being frivolous and always informative'
Globe and Mail (Canada): 'Places That Don't Exist is outstanding television. That's because Simon Reeve, the host/reporter, is endlessly curious and incredibly brave. When we last encountered Reeve he was showing us around "the Stans," countries such as Kazakhstan, that few outsiders visit. It was an excellent series, exceptionally revealing of both the general and specific. Reeve is now one of the great TV figures. A smart and cheerful Englishman, he's a combination of Michael Palin and serious political reporter.'
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SIMON REEVE is an adventurer, TV presenter and New York Times bestselling author with a passion for travel, current affairs, history, conservation and the environment. He has been around the world three times for the BBC series Equator, Tropic of Capricorn, and Tropic of Cancer, and has travelled extensively in more than 100 countries. Simon's last journey around the Tropic of Cancer enthralled millions and was described by The Times of London as: "a real gem...Reeve is in a class of his own". Readers of a leading travel magazine voted it their favourite TV series. Simon, who is an ambassador for the nature conservation organisation WWF, has been awarded a One World Broadcasting Trust award for an "outstanding contribution to greater world understanding". His books include Tropic of Capricorn (published by BBC Books), and The New Jackals: Ramzi Yousef, Osama bin Laden and the future of terrorism, which warned of a new age of apocalyptic terrorism, and was the first in the world on bin Laden and al Qaeda. Originally published in 1998 it has been a New York Times bestseller. Simon has contributed to other studies into organised crime, terrorism, biological warfare and corruption. His book One Day in September: the story of the 1972 Munich Olympics massacre was published in 2000. The film of the same name, narrated by the actor Michael Douglas, won an Oscar for best feature documentary.
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You can find out more information on Simon's journeys, and see more of Simon's films, at his website: www.simonreeve.co.uk or at www.youtube.com/shootandscribble
Thanks for watching!
- published: 14 Nov 2011
- views: 14593
11:52
Inside Story - South Ossetia - 10 Aug 08 - Part 1
Inside Story asks who the likely winners and losers are in the conflict over South Ossetia...
published: 11 Aug 2008
Inside Story - South Ossetia - 10 Aug 08 - Part 1
Inside Story asks who the likely winners and losers are in the conflict over South Ossetia and who has the power to bring it to an end.
- published: 11 Aug 2008
- views: 130622
8:26
South Ossetia ' The Birth of a New Nation' No Comment
Australian Journalist, Tim Byrnes, returns to the region - after being the first foreign j...
published: 03 Feb 2012
South Ossetia ' The Birth of a New Nation' No Comment
Australian Journalist, Tim Byrnes, returns to the region - after being the first foreign journalist to report from the area oin the 2008 Russian - Georgian War. Adds pieces of left over footage. Uncut, raw and nothing. Enjoy
- published: 03 Feb 2012
- views: 296
1:45
South Ossetia War
See the short war between Georgia and Russia along with the seperatist states of Abkhazia ...
published: 25 Sep 2012
South Ossetia War
See the short war between Georgia and Russia along with the seperatist states of Abkhazia and South Ossetia.
- published: 25 Sep 2012
- views: 649
12:01
Ethnic Cleansing of Georgians in Tskhinvali Region/South Ossetia - August 2008
Photos and satellite images of Georgian villages in Tskhinvali Region/South Ossetia that w...
published: 26 Dec 2012
Ethnic Cleansing of Georgians in Tskhinvali Region/South Ossetia - August 2008
Photos and satellite images of Georgian villages in Tskhinvali Region/South Ossetia that were totally destroyed and ethnically cleansed as a result of August 2008 Russian military invasion of Georgia. Compilation by "Coalition for Justice".
See more at: http://cfj.ge/en/resources/maps/view/237
- published: 26 Dec 2012
- views: 1340
24:02
Unreported World - Abkhazia, Valley of the Lost (31-10-2008)
On the Abkhazian-Russian conquest of the (Georgian held) Kodori Gorge, in the shadow of th...
published: 16 Feb 2013
Unreported World - Abkhazia, Valley of the Lost (31-10-2008)
On the Abkhazian-Russian conquest of the (Georgian held) Kodori Gorge, in the shadow of the 2008 South Ossetian conflict. Highlighting the displacement of (Georgian) civilians, and the contradictory stories of Abkhazian authorities.
http://www.channel4.com/programmes/unreported-world/episode-guide/series-2008/episode-13
Channel4 wrote: "Fighting in Georgia's breakaway republic of South Ossetia grabbed the headlines in the summer of 2008. But Unreported World reveals that in Georgia's other breakaway republic, Abkhazia, a tragedy was secretly unfolding.
Arriving in Abkhazia, reporter Aidan Hartley and director Alex Nott hear reports of fierce fighting taking place in the Kodori Gorge, high in the Caucasus mountains. After being forced back at checkpoints by militia commanders, the team talk their way onto a helicopter taking mainly Russian journalists on a government organised trip to the valley. [....]"
- published: 16 Feb 2013
- views: 206
38:15
Part 6/6: Hitchhiking trip to Caucasus/Russia: Georgia, Russia, South Ossetia, Latvia, Lithuania, PL
Watch in HD ;) !
/*---------------------------------------------------------------*/
Part...
published: 22 Oct 2012
Part 6/6: Hitchhiking trip to Caucasus/Russia: Georgia, Russia, South Ossetia, Latvia, Lithuania, PL
Watch in HD ;) !
/*---------------------------------------------------------------*/
Part 6/6: Georgia, Russia, South Ossetia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland
/*---------------------------------------------------------------*/
Map (Caucasus): http://i46.tinypic.com/35041du.jpg
Map (Full): http://i50.tinypic.com/352on86.jpg
This is the last part of my trip. I've started it in Tbilisi and moved north to Russia. Quickly I've gone to South Ossetia though Roki Tunnel and after one day came back. Then I was all over North Caucasus in Ingushetia, Chechnya, Kabardino-Balkaria, Stavropol Krai. Then Krasnodar Krai with Sochi, Adler and Krasnodar. After that I saw Rostov-on-Don, Volgograd and Mosva. I haven't been in Petersburg -- i was too tired and frustrated of Russia ;) At the end I went to Katowice where I met with Kasia and spent 4 day. Last 250km to Radom I did with two drivers.
/*---------------------------------------------------------------*/
Skip to
/*---------------------------------------------------------------*/
Georgia 00:10
Russia 01:53
/* North Ossetia 01:53
South Ossetia 02:42
/* Tskhinvali 03:09
Russia 10:30
/* Vladikavkaz, North Ossetia 10:32
/* Ingushetia 11:30
/* Grozny, Chechnya 11:51
/* Ingushetia 15:24
/* Stavropol, Stavropol Krai 16:50
/* Maykop, Adygea 17:17
/* Adler, Krasnodar Krai 19:38
/* Krasnodar, Krasnodar Krai 20:45
/* Rostov-on-Don 20:17
/* Volgograd 22:55
/* Moscva 26:35
/* Mednoye (Katyn Genocide) 29:23
Latvia 33:00
Lithuania 33:40
Poland 34:42
/* Katowice 34:58
/*---------------------------------------------------------------*/
Whole Trip
/*---------------------------------------------------------------*/
Part 1/6: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XDVvWZIo1gw
Part 2/6: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ldm7VIU1qOU
Part 3/6: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ows64H_IWx0
Part 4/6: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U3Fwd5Zncbk
Part 5/6: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a3n4FA2nf8E
Part 6/6: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gwrex-gjhJU
Trip through Poland, Hungary, Serbia, Kosovo, Bulgaria, Turkey, Iraq, Georgia, Abkhazia, Armenia, Nagorno-Karabakh, Azerbaijan, Russia, South Ossetia, Latvia and Lithuania. Everything by hitchhiking (once I used taxi in Pristina and 2-3 times bus outside city for short distances).
Trip began at 08.07.2012 in Radom and ended at 19.09.2012 in Radom as well.
In cities I said firstly country who control territory and secondly the country who is recognizing this territory as itself. So in Turkish Kurdistan firstly I said Turkey and then Kurdistan but in Iraq is conversely (Kurdistan then Iraq).
Mostly I didn't film when people where telling painful stories. I'm not journalist, that's why I got without any bigger problems anywhere I wanted.
- published: 22 Oct 2012
- views: 228
10:02
Caucasus map 1835 Georgia Circassia Ossetia Armenia Azerbaijan Daghestan
this maps shows that:
1. The borders of Circassia (Adyghe)
2. The kinghdom of Basians and ...
published: 30 Jan 2013
Caucasus map 1835 Georgia Circassia Ossetia Armenia Azerbaijan Daghestan
this maps shows that:
1. The borders of Circassia (Adyghe)
2. The kinghdom of Basians and Abazinia in North Caucasus
3. The land called "Greater Abkhazia" is at that time a georgian principality wich georgian royal familie and was absorbed later into the Russian Empire in 1864.
4. in 1835 the georgian principality of Mingrelia (Odishi) had half of today's separatist region of Abkhazia, and the capital Sukhumi was part of the georgian principality.
4. Next we see that Suanes wich infact are georgian svanetians lived in North Caucasus where they had a small principality.
5. Very important is that MOUNTAIN ELBRUS (in georgian Ialbuzi იალბუზი) was at that time a georgian land wich divided Svaneti from Mingrelia, so historically speaking Elbrus is a georgian mounatian.
6. We can see on the map that there is no such thing as "SOUTH OSSETIA", this was latter a comunist creation. We see only the name OSSETIA, and it is in North Caucasus.
7. We see that Mozdok is not part of Ossetia at that time, but part of Great Kabardina.
8. The city Tskhimvali, the so called current capital of "South" Ossetia was part of Georgia, and NOT Ossetia.
9. Lazistan is the land anexated by Turkey, but were laz kartvelian *(georgian) people live
10. Ispir is the home of the Bagrationi dinasty, and we see that it is NOT part of Armenia in this map. ISPIR (Speri) was part of the ancient georgian kinghdom of Diaokhi, Tao-Klarjeti and in this map from the year 1835 it was just part of Turkey, and in the years 1918--1921 it was part of the Democratic republic of Georgia. So the claim that the Bagrationi dinasty is armenian is false, because Ispir was for centuries under the georgian kinghdoms just mentioned.
11. We can see that at that time there was no Armenia, but we see it just to present the historicaly belongings of the armenian lands: Yerevan district, Western Armenia, Artsakh, Nakhchivan
12. We see that instead of a country called Azerbaijan we see: Daghestan wich reaches almost Baku, than in the South East we see Talish principality, and a great part of todays Azerbaijan was part of Kartli (Georgia)
13. Kistia refaires to Chechenya, and we know know that the kists *(chechens) from Georgia are orthodox christians
- published: 30 Jan 2013
- views: 702
9:54
Aboriginal population of Tskhimvali Samachablo "South ossetia"
Samachablo is the correct name for the so called region South Ossetia...
published: 19 Dec 2012
Aboriginal population of Tskhimvali Samachablo "South ossetia"
Samachablo is the correct name for the so called region South Ossetia
- published: 19 Dec 2012
- views: 62
2:05
Russian vs. Georgian infantry - South Ossetia battle
monday,august 11th. last pockets of resitance stage an ambush on russian forces convoy - a...
published: 12 Aug 2008
Russian vs. Georgian infantry - South Ossetia battle
monday,august 11th. last pockets of resitance stage an ambush on russian forces convoy - and again: thanks a lot to CNN for providing the video!
- published: 12 Aug 2008
- views: 129917
5:52
South Ossetia or Samachablo ? When did the term South Ossetia appear in use ?
WHEN DID THE TERM "SOUTH OSSETIA" APPEAR IN USE?
There is no evidence of use of the term ...
published: 20 Dec 2012
South Ossetia or Samachablo ? When did the term South Ossetia appear in use ?
WHEN DID THE TERM "SOUTH OSSETIA" APPEAR IN USE?
There is no evidence of use of the term "South Ossetia" before the XIX century either in Georgian or foreign written sources. In the understanding of that period Ossets' country was Ossetia, located in North Caucasus.
The term "South Ossetia" was first used in 1830 in a series of letters, published in "Tifliskie Vedomosti". It seems that the correspondent used this term on his own initiative, because in 1830 it was mentioned in the report presented to Chernishov, military minister of count Paskevich:" To calm the Ossetian tribe I consider it expedient to conduct a small military operation. This expedition will be directed against North Kartli Ossetians, located southwards of the Caucasus highlands"1.
In the correspondent's opinion a total amount of the population of the zone named by him "South Ossetia" was 7 200.
In all the historical documents existed on Ossetia before 1830 there was no fact of using any determinant -- "South" or "North" -- in regard to Ossetia in both the Georgian and foreign written sources. The foreign scholars and travelers did not know the term "South Ossetia". Only German professor K.Koch fixed the term "South Ossetia" to designate Georgian historical province Dvaleti in the XIX century. The following was mentioned on Dvaleti in the Russian written monuments: "Dvaleti was an integral part of Georgia within the entire Middle Ages. After East Georgia was joined to Russia it was in Tbilisi gubernia and only in 1859 it joined Vladikavkaz (Ossetia) region2. It should be noted here that the Rusian scholars call North Ossetia a historical Ossetia3.
On the basis of conducted research S.Lekishvili pointed to rare use of the term "South Ossetia" within the entire XIX century. He mentioned that in 12 volumes of Caucasus archeological commission acts, which concerned 1864-1917 and involved more than 10 000 documents in the Georgian, Arabian, Russian, Persian and Turkish languages, the term
1 S.Lekishvili. When did the term "South Ossetia" appear? See the book: "The Issue of Ossets", p 261. (Acts, vol. VII, p 354)
2 Essays on the history of the South Ossetian AR, vol. I, 1985, p 120
3 D.Lavrov. Essay on Ossetia and Ossets, jrnl. "Terskie Vedomosti", # 20, 1874
28
In political terminology the term "South Ossetia" appeared in the 60s of the XIX century and since then it had been used by the Russian officials.
Before that several measures were undertaken for administrative unification of "Ossetia", which would provide the Russian rule not only in Ossetia itself, but in the entire space of the Caucasus Ridge. Baron Rozen said:
"Our firm rule in Ossetia would surely cut the Caucasus Ridge into two parts, while now only the Georgian Military Road crosses union between the peoples half-occupied by us and with animosity against us"1 Soon the regions of compact settlement of Ossets in the northern part of Shida Kartli were called "Ossetia": in 1843 "Ossetian okrug" was formed in Tbilisi gubernia, which was divided into Java, Patara Liakhvi and Nari (historical Dvaleti) sectors. Later Nari sector was transferred from Tbilisi gubernia to the Ossetian military district (formed in 1959 in North Caucasus), which some time after joined Tergi region and in 1924 entered North Ossetian ASSR. Thus Georgia lost its historical territory -- Dvaleti.Through all these measures, in particular, through forming Ossetian okrug in 1843,
"farsighted toponymic sabotage, substantiated ground was prepared for future mutation of Ossetians' territorial claims for the native land of Georgia, named as "Ossetia" or "South Ossetia" and for implementation of the idea on further unification of "two Ossetias". These measures turned into aggressive Ossetian separatism in the XX century2. Assistant professor R.Lominadze justly announced that formation of "Ossetian military district"
in North Caucasus and of "Ossetian okrug" (later "Ossetian district" in Tbilisi gubernia became the basis for new names -- "North Ossetia" and
"South Ossetia". The first officially published document, where these terms were used, was the 1860 year report, prepared by the committee for organizing the society for restoring Orthodox Christianity in Caucasus. It said: "The committee concluded that great attention should be turned to restoration and strengthening of Christianity.... In Samurzaqano, Svaneti, South Ossetia (stress by A.T.), Tusheti and Khevsureti, from where the light of Christianity will further penetrate into Abkhazia, Balkanians and Circassians, North Ossetia (stress by A.T.), among Kists and other Chachan tribes"3.
1 Cited from : R.Lominadze. Who and when called Shida Kartli highlands "South Ossetia"? newspaper "Ganatleba", October 30, 1991
2 V.Itonishvili. South Ossetia in Central Georgia?! See the book: The Isue of Ossets, p16.
3 Cited from R.Lominadze. Op.cit.
- published: 20 Dec 2012
- views: 161
Vimeo results:
9:24
Girl from South Ossetia
Inga from Tskhinval/i, the capital of South Ossetia, tells about her life, her views, her ...
published: 28 Apr 2012
author: gogroupmedia
Girl from South Ossetia
Inga from Tskhinval/i, the capital of South Ossetia, tells about her life, her views, her dreams and her plans for the future. Tskhinval/i, South Ossetia, October 2010. Produced by the Eyewitness Studio/GO Group Media, Tbilisi, Georgia. www.gogroupmedia.net
48:30
War 08.08.08. The Art of Betrayal
About the film
“War 08.08.08. The Art of Betrayal” – is one of the first documentary Inte...
published: 04 Nov 2008
author: RUSSIA.RU
War 08.08.08. The Art of Betrayal
About the film
“War 08.08.08. The Art of Betrayal” – is one of the first documentary Internet-films. This is the most outspoken film about the war, that started on the day of opening of the Olympic Games in Beijing, the film about the war, in which tens of Russian peacemaker perished as well as hundreds of peaceful Ossetians; it is the film about the war that turned out to be the doping drug for the rating of the republican candidate to the post of the President of the USA – John McCain.
The editorial staff of Russia.ru kept an eye on the progress of this war from the very beginning of Georgian invasion in Tskhinval. The camera crew of the TV-channel came into the destroyed republic on the 12th of August for the first time.
This trip resulted in more than 100 footages about the destroyed capital of the South Ossetia, about the burnt villages, dead civilians, about the families left without their houses, about the people, whose relatives are missing.
Russia.ru created a large base of experts, commentators and witnesses of the war crimes of the Georgian army. Finally it was decided to carry out a complete investigation of the events in the Caucasus, and the camera crew of Russia.ru headed by the writer Kirill Benediktov went the the South Ossetia again.
The stories, that were told to the journalists by the witnesses of these events and by prosecutor's office of the Republic, clearly showed that the film about genocide of the Ossetians just can not have any other name but “The Art of Betrayal”
The attack upon Tskhinval was preceded by a range of treacheries. OSCE and other international observers have just ignored the claim of the Ossetian part about the fact that the Georgian army is preparing the base area for the bombardment of Tskhinval and has already taken a strategically important high ground and for several weeks has been building entrenchments, blindages and fire trenches there.
Exactly from these entrenchments fire was delivered to the sleeping city by the Georgian peacemakers wearing the uniform of NATO – although they were the people whose duty was to keep peace within this region, but not to bring deaths. The traitors, the fifth column, turned out to be in the South Ossetia as well. And the most straightforward treachery was the speech of Mihail Saakashvili, who 4 hours before the attack upon Tskhinval calmed down the Ossetian people, persuading them that he doesn’t want to set the war off.
The film “War 08.08.08. The Art of Betrayal” is made up of 40 hours of the video-footage, brought from the South Ossetia by the camera crew, found on the YouTube Web site and other video- portals, sent by the Internet users, or taken from the video recordings of the cell-phones of the dead Georgian soldiers.
For the first time in the history the war has been recorded by the video-cameras of the cell-phones. These recording give the audience the chance to see the attack upon the South Ossetia in the way, the aggressors (who were destroying the houses of the Ossetian people with the cries of joy) saw it.
The uniqueness of these recordings is obvious: the journalists just are not able to film the very thick of the war, the faces of the murderers at the moment when the crime is being committed, the most straightforward and scary video of genocide. All this was recorded by the Georgian military men themselves.
The mission of this film was to show the truth about this war to the huge amount of viewers, to the millions of people in the whole world. It is the film about those people, who set off this massacre, about the fact who backs Mihail Saakashvili, and who received political dividends from the genocide of the Ossetian people and from the western informational chasing aimed at Russia.
In the nearest future the film will be translated into English, Chinese, Spanish, German and other languages and will be available for all the users of the World Wide Web. If someone of our audience wishes to take part in the distribution of this film, if you have the chance to help us, you can put the hyperlink to the film “War 08.08.08” in your blog or on your Internet-page.
It is so, because today any people, who are not indifferent to the tragedy of the South Ossetia, can become the participants of unmasking the lies of a range of Western mass media and of politicians, with whose connivance and assistance Georgia was able to attack the sleeping Tskhinval to frighten the whole world by the made up “Russian threat”.
It is so, because the war in the South Ossetia is not to vanish in history, is not to be forgotten and is not to become one the latest historical myths.
It is so, because all the world has to know what happened on the 8th of August, 2008.
History of the conflict
In 1774 Ossetia became a part of the Russian Empire. At that time, it hadn’t been divided into South and North Ossetia yet. In 1801 Georgia also joined the Russian Empire.
After the collapse of the Russian Empire
1:14
Russian army assaults journalists in South Ossetia
published: 23 Aug 2008
author: ekatiushaname
Russian army assaults journalists in South Ossetia
1:14
The way Russian peacekeepers acted in South Ossetia
The way Russian peacekeepers acted in South Ossetia...
published: 25 Aug 2008
author: kasime
The way Russian peacekeepers acted in South Ossetia
The way Russian peacekeepers acted in South Ossetia
Youtube results:
2:54
Ex-KGB Chief Sworn in as South Ossetia President
Red carpet in the centre of Tskhinvali... Guests from Russia, Nicaragua, Georgian breakawa...
published: 20 Apr 2012
Ex-KGB Chief Sworn in as South Ossetia President
Red carpet in the centre of Tskhinvali... Guests from Russia, Nicaragua, Georgian breakaway Abkhazia and two more unrecognized regions arrived to attend the ceremony. With guards of honor marching in inauguration hall, newly elected leader, takes his oath.
Press TV's Svetlana Alimova reports from Tbilisi.
- published: 20 Apr 2012
- views: 257
1:55
Georgia the Aggressor: Saakashvili, not Russia, to blame for 2008 war
The Georgian President is to blame for the war with Russia over South Ossetia, four years ...
published: 24 Oct 2012
Georgia the Aggressor: Saakashvili, not Russia, to blame for 2008 war
The Georgian President is to blame for the war with Russia over South Ossetia, four years ago. That's according to the leader of Georgia's newly-elected ruling party. RT's Tom Barton reports.
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RT (Russia Today) is a global news network broadcasting from Moscow and Washington studios. RT is the first news channel to break the 500 million YouTube views benchmark.
- published: 24 Oct 2012
- views: 4747
10:57
About midday 08.08.08 South Ossetia, Java. Eduard Kokoity and first Russian reinforcements.
Около полудня 08.08.08. Южноосетинский посёлок Джава. Встреча передовой батальонной тактич...
published: 27 Apr 2012
About midday 08.08.08 South Ossetia, Java. Eduard Kokoity and first Russian reinforcements.
Около полудня 08.08.08. Южноосетинский посёлок Джава. Встреча передовой батальонной тактической группы 693 мсп под командованием полковника Андрея Казаченко с южноосетинскими силовиками под командованием президента республики Эдуарда Кокойты. (Видео Заура Алборова)
- published: 27 Apr 2012
- views: 4405
7:10
Places That Don't Exist: South Ossetia, Abkhazia 1 of 4
There are almost 200 official countries in the world. But there are dozens more breakaway ...
published: 19 Aug 2008
Places That Don't Exist: South Ossetia, Abkhazia 1 of 4
There are almost 200 official countries in the world. But there are dozens more breakaway states which are determined to be separate and independent.
The breakaway states have their own rulers, parliaments or warlords, and are home to millions of people, but they're not officially recognised as proper countries by the rest of the world.
Several have their own armies and police forces, and issue passports and even postage stamps which the rest of the world ignores. All of the breakaway states have declared independence after violent struggles with a neighbouring state.
Some now survive peacefully, but others are a magnet for terrorists and weapons smuggling, and have armies ready for a fight. Several could be at the centre of future wars which threaten their regions and the wider world.
In a world of easy adventure tourism, Simon visits breakaway states & unrecognized nations which don't usually feature on the tourist trail: Somaliland, Transniestria, South Ossetia, Taiwan, Abkhazia, Ajaria and Nagorno-Karabkh
Welcome to Places That Don't Exist...
Georgia, South Ossetia, Abkhazia and Adjaria
The former Soviet state of Georgia has a particular problem with breakaway states. After independence from Moscow three parts of the country -- South Ossetia, Abkhazia and Adjaria, broke away from Georgia. Conflicts broke out, thousands were killed, and the whole region has suffered ever since. The new President of Georgia, who Simon meets in a lift, is trying to re-unify the country, but he faces a difficult task.
Simon travels across the frontline to visit South Ossetia -- a self-declared country which has had its own flag, army and government for 12 years. The Ossetian people speak a different language to Georgians, and their government has vowed to fight to the death rather than rejoin the Georgian fold.
Simon persuades a tough Ossetian Foreign Ministry official to let him have a look around. Tensions are high between Georgia and South Ossetia, and the Ossetians are suspicious of foreigners, particularly when a government guide tells locals in the market that Simon's from London, America. After his nationality is explained people become friendlier, although locals are tense because everyone has someone they love on the dangerous Georgian frontline and war is imminent. Everywhere Simon goes he's followed by state security.
Back in Georgia proper Simon realises war is close when he finds a troop train packed with soldiers and tanks. He's chased away by armed guards.
Heading west to the former breakaway region of Adjaria, Simon visits the palatial home of the former dictator. His son used to race a Lambourghini along the main street of the region, much to the anger of locals earning an average £15 a month.
Elsewhere in Georgia, Simon and his BBC crew are the first film unit ever allowed inside a major former Soviet military base. In a chilling scene, they find thousands of tonnes of explosives unguarded and huge working missiles, any of which could be stolen by criminals or terrorists, and which are capable of destroying skyscrapers.
- published: 19 Aug 2008
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