SHOTLIST
Igoeti area
1. Tyres, weighted with rocks, laid across road as makeshift
Russian checkpoint
2.
Soldier kicking line of rocks
3. Soldier waiting at roadside
4. Soldier moving tyre barrier
5.
Road sign: "Igoeti"
6. Soldier clearing tyre barrier
7.
Close up, soldier kicking tyre to side of the road
8. Soldier walking across newly-cleared road
9.
Various, soldiers waiting at roadside
10. Russian tank on hillside overlooking area
11. Various of
Georgian checkpoint near Igoeti
12. Various of
World food Programme aid convoy returning from
Gori
Tbilisi
13. Wide of central square in front of town hall
14. Wide of people walking in street
15. Mid of man sitting on bench
16. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Vox pop, local resident, no name given
I think that they (
Russians) are trying to draw out the process, why I don't know. I just can't understand what they want from us and why they dislike us so much. They have always been jealous of
Georgia and will continue to be so in the future."
17. Wide of parliament
18.
Georgian flag
19. Wide of people on street
20. SOUNDBITE (Georgian) Vox pop, No name given, local resident:
"They have to withdraw. There is no doubt about it, it is our Georgian territory, our soil and why should be here?"
21. Various of news stand
22. Various of Georgian soldiers in street
STORYLINE
Russian troops were seen apparently dismantling a makeshift roadside checkpoint near the town of Igoeti in central Georgia on
Tuesday morning.
They kicked and shuffled a line of tyres, weighted with rocks, to the side of the road but then showed no
sign of leaving the area, waiting instead beside the piles of stones which were all that remained of their checkpoint, some 40 kilometres (25 miles) from the key town of Gori.
The road seemed deserted, with no traffic passing either way while an AP
Television crew remained at the scene.
Some
200 yards (metres) away,
Georgian police at a checkpoint of their own continued to await a Russian withdrawal from Igoeti on Tuesday.
Four Russian armoured personnel carriers, each with about 15 men, rolled on Monday afternoon from Gori to Igoeti, a crossroads town even closer to the Georgian capital Tbilisi and on Tuesday morning, a Russian tank could also be seen on a hillside southeast of Gori.
Russian troops and tanks have controlled a wide swath of Georgia for days, including the country's main east-west highway where Gori sits.
AP television filmed a World food Programme aid convoy returning from Gori.
In Tbilisi one local resident said she thought the Russians were "trying to draw out the process."
"I just can't understand what they want from us and why they dislike us so much. They have always been jealous of Georgia and will continue to be so in the future," she added.
The Russian presence essentially cuts the small
Caucasus Mountains nation in half and threatens pro-Western
President Mikhail Saakashvili's efforts to keep it from falling apart after the war bolstered the chances of
South Ossetia and another Russian-backed separatist region,
Abkhazia, of remaining free of Georgian rule.
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev had told
French President Nicolas Sarkozy on Sunday that Russian troops would begin pulling back on Monday, but stopped short of promising they would return to
Russia.
On the ground, there were few signs of a withdrawal, raising more questions about whether Russia was fulfilling its side of the cease-fire intended to end the short but intense war that has stoked tension between a resurgent Russia and the
West.
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- published: 21 Jul 2015
- views: 50