Rebels declare the 'liberation' of Abkhazia

Georgian defeat in South Ossetia opened the door for separatist troops, writes Ilya Kachayev in Chkhalta

Georgian defeat in South Ossetia opened the door for separatist troops, writes Ilya Kachayevin Chkhalta

JUBILANT REBEL troops proclaimed the "liberation" of Abkhazia yesterday as they surveyed a remote gorge abandoned by Georgian forces, who dropped weapons, ammunition and clothes in their flight.

The Abkhazian rebel forces took advantage of the defeat of Tbilisi's troops in South Ossetia, another separatist area at which the Russian army drove back the Georgians at the weekend, to capture the Kodori gorge on Tuesday.

"Abkhazia has been completely liberated, there are now no Georgian troops on our territory. Abkhazia has reinstated its territorial sovereignty, we are just happy we have peace," said Alexander Melnik, the unrecognised state's deputy defence minister.

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Russian troops did not appear to have been present before or during the assault. This correspondent has not seen a single soldier in Russian uniform since they pulled out two days ago.

"They left just before the operation started," said Mr Melnik.

He was speaking in Chkhalta, once capital of the Georgian-backed administration of Abkhazia and now under total rebel control.

The headquarters of the Georgian-backed government was almost totally destroyed.

Boxes of bullets, grenades and shells, mostly with English-language labels, lay on the roadside. At one point, troops had to move a pile of mortar shells before they could drive on.

One stockpile of ammunition, machine guns and mortars on five large trailers had been mined by the retreating Georgians, but the explosives had failed to go off.

The Kodori gorge was the only part of Abkhazia, wedged between the Black Sea and the Caucasus mountains, still held by Tbilisi when its forces were defeated by the rebels in 1993.

The only trace of Georgian control was the still-operational Geo Magti mobile phone network, which allowed some contact with the outside world.

Several kilometres from the government building was the undamaged barracks building.

The Georgian troops had abandoned jeans, flak jackets, helmets, toiletries, magazines, underpants and half-packed rucksacks when they fled.

English-language instructions for a Bushmaster automatic rifle lay by one bed, and piles of destroyed American-made guns still smoked by the side of the road.

A pair of Abkhazian soldiers brandished an undestroyed assault rifle they had found. The only shooting this correspondent heard was them firing into the air - in triumph.

Almost all the civilian inhabitants of the gorge appeared to have fled, and their houses were empty.

The village of Azhara, further up the gorge, was deserted, although cattle still wandered between some of the houses. The houses were intact with no sign of shell damage.

"Perhaps some went to Georgia, perhaps some went up the mountains.

"We can see their cattle though, so they cannot have gone far," said Mr Melnik.

"I can guarantee that now this will be a peaceful place for the cattle." - ( Reuters)