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What happened to the 21 Georgian soldiers???

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  • What happened to the 21 Georgian soldiers???

    Couple of things...

    What happened regarding the Georgian soldiers that had birdflu symptoms? Got quiet!!!

    Remember...



    Three Soldiers were Taken to Intensive Therapy Department in Kutaisi

    Three soldiers were taken to Davit Aghmashenebeli Church Hospital of Kutaisi, to the department of intensive therapy on March 17.

    They are the soldiers of the subdivision under the Defence Ministry, dislocated in Kutaisi, Imereti region, western Georgia. The diagnosis of Rodani Chachanidze, Giorgi Gamezardashvili and Nikoloz Narchemashvili is the acute respiratory infection with pneumonia. They were brought to the stationary hospital with the nasal bleeding. They are being delivered the treatment at the reanimation department currently.

    InterpressNews was informed that another 19 soldiers are ill with the similar symptoms but they have no acute forms of the disease like the their abovementioned colleagues.

    The representatives of the army unit choose to refrain from comments.

    Interpressnews

  • #2
    Re: What happened to the sick kids???



    Article data: 13.03.06

    Several Kids Show Acute Respiratory Infection Symptoms

    Symptoms of acute respiratory infection have been revealed in some pupils of the school in Diakonidzeebi village of the Khulo district. With this reason, 27 pupils had not appeared in the school on March 13.

    The facts of poultry death were observed in the village. A mobile team of doctors of Ajarian Healthcare Ministry is dispatched to the site. It is not excluded that hospitalization of pupils will take place in Batumi.

    No panic is noticeable in Batumi for the moment.

    Comment


    • #3
      Fear in Batumi

      All you wish to know about the countries around the Black Sea focussing on News and Travel. The Black Sea pages provide an open database platform on which people can share the latest news, traveltips and opinions on the BlackSea-countries.


      Fear in Batumi

      March 15, 2004
      Civil Georgia News

      Written by Giorgi Sepashvili, Tea Gularidze
      Posted by HW on March 26, 2006

      Armed men
      The mood in Batumi is solemn; people prefer to stay at homes, as armed men are patrolling Georgia's defiant region Adjara's capital.

      Anti-crisis center
      Georgian authorities set up an anti-crisis center, chaired by Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania, based in town of Poti to tackle Adjarian crisis, following after President Saakashvili was barred from entering the region on March 14.

      Curfew and empty streets
      Meanwhile, defiant Adjarian leadership declared a curfew in the region, deploying paramilitary forces and armored vehicles in the capital Batumi and at its administrative border.

      "People are afraid and the situation is very strained. Streets of Batumi are unusually empty. Many armed men are seen, as well as armored vehicles," Aslan Tchanishvili, who works for Batumi branch of human rights advocacy NGO Georgia's Young Lawyers' Association, told Civil Georgia.

      Witnesses say that many shops and trading centers in Batumi were closed on Monday.

      "Prices went up. Owners of those shops, which still are open decided to increase prices, maybe because the borders with the rest of Georgia are closed," Aslan Tchanishvili added.

      People afraid, schools closed
      Mzia Amaghlobeli, who is an editor of the local newspaper Batumelebi, says people in Adjara are afraid.

      "Several my neighbors have already left Batumi. Who has a chance they prefer to go to Tbilisi, however main part of those people which leave the town go to nearby villages," Mzia Amaghlobeli told Civil Georgia.

      Schools in Batumi also have been closed down and the newspapers were not delivered in the town on Monday. "However, Tbilisi-based television, including Rustavi 2 and Imedi continue broadcasting the region," Mzia Amaghlobeli says.

      Intimidation
      Opposition movements in Adjara, which demand region's unilateral ruler Aslan Abashidze's resignation, claim that intimidation of their activists has been intensified in recent days.

      "There were around 40 cases of intimidation of our activists in recent days. Local authorities want them to leave Adjara. Supporters of the local authorities are going door-by-door to our activists and warn them to go away from Adjara," Tamaz Diasamidze of Our Adjara movement, which is a major opposition union in Adjara, told Civil Georgia.

      Difficult to leave
      However, it becomes more and more difficult to leave the region, as railway and air connection with rest of the country is suspended.

      Newly established anti-crisis center would be used, as President Saakashvili said to provide humanitarian aid to Adjara's population as well as to help those intimidated by the Adjarian leadership.

      President Saakashvili also said on March 15, that the center would carry out measures in order to "prevent unsanctioned movements."

      Borders closed, no oil shipment
      "Vessels of the Georgian coast guard will close Batumi port to prevent import of illegal arms in the region," Saakashvili said.

      Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania says that the closing borders with Adjara would be a blow for oil shipment via Batumi ; however he added that the central authorities will not let Georgia's disintegration.

      There is an oil refinery in Batumi and port in the Adjarian capital is used for shipments of oil and refined products from Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan that leaves via port of Batumi.

      "10-11 million tone of oil is refined annually in Batumi," Zurab Zhvania added.

      Elections
      The recent crisis between Tbilisi and Batumi also threatens upcoming elections, scheduled for March 28, not only in Adjara, which is notorious for highly-suspicious elections, but in entire country.

      Koba Davitashvili was President Saakashvili's closest ally, but decided to go into opposition after controversial constitutional changes.

      "It is less possible that the elections will be held in Adjara. I do not expect that the crisis will be overcome very soon," Koba Davitashvili said on March 15.

      Some political analysts in Georgia suggest that in case elections are not held in Adjara, the part of opposition parties would cast doubts over the legitimacy of election in entire Georgia.

      No fraud
      Ghia Nodia of Tbilisi-based think-tank Caucasian Institute of Peace, Democracy and Development says that the recent crisis is caused by the upcoming elections.

      "The central authorities do not want to hold elections in Adjara in the way they were held during previous years - with widespread ballot fraud. At the same time, the Adjarian leadership does not wish to hold elections in the way the central authorities demand. Finally, this has triggered confrontation between the sides," Ghia Nodia said.

      Not optimistic
      Mood is not optimistic in Tbilisi as well. Political circles in the Georgian capital suggest that Aslan Abashidze, who has unilaterally ruled the region for past decade will not give up power easily.

      "Aslan Abashidze's recent moves are clear indications that he is ready to fight to end," Koba Davitashvili says.

      Countries:
      Georgia

      Places:
      Batumi (Georgia) City
      Poti (Georgia) City

      Persons:
      Abashidze, Aslan (M) Politician Abkhazia (GE)
      Saakashvili, Misha (M) Politician Georgia
      Zhvania, Zurab (M) Politician Georgia

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: What happened to the 21 Georgian soldiers???

        War...

        I'm not a speculator, but a scientist, yet I think we need to post a "lookout" for what could be happening in Georgia. Tiblisi etc is not far from Azerbaijan. The river at Tiblisi is the headwaters of the river that flows through Azerbaijan, if I remember right. The waterways of Turkey and Iraq are not far as the bird flies.

        I wish we had more information...

        Comment

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