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Russia withdraws all troops from Georgia

Other News Materials 15 November 2007 06:06 (UTC +04:00)

A top Russian general said early Thursday that Russia has completed its withdrawal of troops that had been based in Georgia since the Soviet collapse, according to the ITAR-Tass news agency.

The presence of Russian troops in the ex-Soviet republic was one of the longtime irritants between Georgia and its giant neighbor.

"There are no more Russian troops in Georgia, there remain only peacekeepers ... in Abkhazia and those that are part of the combined forces in South Ossetia with the participation of Georgia," the news agency quoted Commander-in-Chief of the Russian Ground Troops Gen. Alexei Maslov as saying.

Abkhazia and South Ossetia are two separatist regions of Georgia that have been outside Georgian control since the mid-1990s. Georgian leaders complain that Russian troops in both regions support the separatists, and their continued presence is likely to remain an issue of hot dispute between Tbilisi and Moscow.

But the final removal of troops that were based in Georgia as a holdover from the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union would eliminate another of the most contentious points in Russian-Georgian relations.

Calls to the Georgian Defense Ministry for comment early Thursday morning went unanswered.

The RIA-Novosti news agency cited an aide to Maslov, Col. Igor Konashenkov, as saying that the final convoy of troops and equipment, which had been based in Batumi in far southwestern Georgia, crossed into Armenia just after midnight. Those troops are to be based in the northern Armenian town of Gyumri, Konashenkov was quoted as saying. ( AP )

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