New York - UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon will take part
in talks next week in Geneva to try to settle the Russia-Georgia
conflict and determine the future role of the UN in the Caucasus, a
UN spokeswoman said Friday.
Ban will join representatives of the European Union and the
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe in Geneva on
Tuesday, a day before the start of official negotiations on the
Georgian conflict.
His special representative, Johan Verbeke of Belgium, will attend
the talks beginning Wednesday, said UN spokeswoman Marie Okabe. The
parties in the Georgian conflict are expected to attend the talks.
Fighting broke out on August 8 between Russian and Georgian troops
in South Ossetia, and spread to Abkhazia, two territories still
claimed by the Georgian government in Tbilisi as its provinces. But
South Ossetia and Abkhazia have since seceded from Tbilisi, in a move
recognized by Moscow.
The conflict has put the UN mission of military observers in
Georgia in jeopardy. On Thursday, the UN Security Council in New York
extended the former UN mission in Georgia for just four months rather
than a longer period because of the unsettled conflict.
The mission's new mandate will expire in mid-February. Its 153
military observers were caught in the fighting between Russia and
Georgian troops and had to be evacuated from their posts in the
Kodori Valley that separates breakaway Abkhazia and the Tbilisi
government.
For the next four months the mission has no specific name because
of the uncertainty of the political outcome of the Geneva talks. It
was originally called UN Mission in Georgia (UNOMIG).
Your Talkback on this Story