News Briefs:
GEORGIA: ABKHAZ LEADERS CONDEMNS EU SATELLITE MONITORING
11/17/09

The European Union's plan to use satellite images to monitor the security situation in Georgia's conflict zones is drawing an angry reaction from breakaway Abkhazia.

"Because we are not letting European Commission monitors in Abkhazia, they have decided to watch us from outer space," de facto Abkhaz foreign minister Sergei Shamba was quoted as saying on November 17 by the Kavkazsky Uzel news service.

Shamba complained that the European Union Monitoring Mission, the only international mechanism set up to observe the cease-fire with Russia in Georgia, works, in effect, to protect Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili's rule.

EU observers said earlier that, amid constant accusations from all sides, satellite images will determine the real situation in the conflict areas, but cannot become an effective alternative to observation on the ground.

Abkhazia and South Ossetia, both now home to Russian military bases, do not allow European monitors onto their territories. Shamba said that Sukhumi will allow European observers access only if the EU recognizes Abkhazia's independence from Georgia.