I Survived
the Georgian
War. Here's
What I Saw.
I blame
Georgia's
leaders.
By Lira
Tskhovrebova
08/10/08 "CSM"
-- -Tskhinvali,
South
Ossetia - In
a speech
before the
United
Nations last
month,
Georgian
President Mikheil
Saakashvili
implored
world
leaders to
set up an
international
investigation
to find out
the truth
about the
war in South
Ossetia.
I couldn't
agree more.
But I think
the results
of an honest
investigation
would reveal
a very
different
"truth" than
what
President
Saakashvili
claims.
I know this
because I
was in
Tskhinvali,
the capital
of South
Ossetia, on
Aug. 7 when
Georgian
troops
marched into
the city and
killed my
friends and
neighbors. I
huddled with
my family in
terror for
three nights
while
Saakashvili's
tanks and
rockets
destroyed
hundreds of
our homes,
desecrated
cemeteries,
gutted
schools and
hospitals.
I also have
good reason
not to trust
what
Saakashvili
says. For
three days
before the
attack I had
been getting
calls from
many
Georgian
friends
warning me
to get out.
They said
Saakashvili
was planning
an attack.
Most of the
Georgians
living in
South
Ossetia left
because they
knew what
was coming.
On the night
of Aug. 7,
Saakashvili
went on
television
and assured
the
frightened
civilian
population
of South
Ossetia that
he would not
attack us.
This was
long after
the time
Saakashvili
now claims
Russians had
begun
"invading"
Georgia.
Ossetians
went to bed
relieved and
thankful for
a peaceful
night.
Less than
two hours
later,
according to
credible
international
accounts,
his
artillery,
bombers, and
three
brigades of
ground
troops
unleashed
what I can
only
describe as
a fierce
hell on our
city. In the
moment, we
knew only
our fear as
we hid.
Afterward I
spoke with
hundreds of
Ossetians to
find out
what was
done to us.
My friend's
elderly
father tried
to douse the
flames set
by Georgian
fire on the
home he had
built with
his hands.
His leg was
severed by
shrapnel
from
Georgian
weapons. He
bled to
death while
his disabled
wife crawled
from their
burning
home.
Ossetians
saw Georgian
tanks firing
into
basements
where women
and children
hid for
safety They
saw fleeing
families
shot down by
Georgian
snipers. We
learned that
the Georgian
military had
used Grad
rocket
systems and
cluster
bombs
against
Tskhinvali.
Yes, I would
very much
like to see
an
international
commission
investigate
the truth of
what
happened.
When I came
out from
hiding,
thanking God
that the
Russians had
saved our
lives, I was
dismayed by
the reaction
of the
international
media to
what had
happened.
There was
nothing
about
Ossetian
deaths and
the
unprovoked
horrors
inflicted by
Saakashvili's
military. It
made my
heart sick.
The truth
has been
crushed by
Georgia's
powerful
public
relations
machine as
mercilessly
as Georgian
tanks rolled
over the
defenseless
civilians of
Tskhinvali.
I know that
Americans
are a
generous and
fair people.
But
Americans
haven't been
told the
truth about
what
happened to
us.
Americans
don't
understand
that
Ossetians
are an
independent,
Christian
Orthodox
people with
a deep
history in
our land.
The world
talks only
about
Georgian
freedom.
What of
freedom for
my people?
Does our
suffering,
do our
voices, mean
nothing?
I don't
blame the
Georgian
people for
what
happened to
us. The vast
number of
Ossetians
and
Georgians
want to live
in peace. I
blame
Georgia's
leaders.
Saakashvili
has
persuaded
the world
that he is a
"beacon" of
democracy
and
openness.
But he won't
even tell
his own
people the
truth. My
Georgian
friends
weren't
allowed to
see any
Russian news
sites during
the conflict
because all
of those
sites were
blocked by
Saakashvili's
government.
I know we
are a small
people, and
I make no
claim to
understanding
the experts
in
geopolitics
with their
theories and
pronouncements
about the
great
powers. But
I have
fought for
women's
rights in
Ossetia for
12 years and
I believe in
the truth.
In a recent
article,
Saakashvili
cynically
dismissed
Ossetian
suffering
and deaths
because, he
said, Russia
had "lied"
about how
many of my
people were
killed by
the Georgian
military.
It breaks my
heart to
even engage
in this
discussion.
No one –
including
Saakashvili
– knows how
many
Ossetians
were killed
by his Army.
I have
friends who
buried loved
ones in
their
backyards
because
there were
no
alternatives.
Many people
are still
missing.
Does
Saakashvili
believe his
vicious
attack on a
civilian
city was
justified if
he only
killed a few
hundred
rather than
a few
thousand? Do
Americans
realize that
a military
trained and
equipped by
the US
government
attacked a
civilian
population
as they
slept in
their beds?
Can they
justify
sending
another
billion
dollars to
Georgia and
nothing for
those
Georgia
attacked?
I have made
an urgent
appeal to
the world
for
humanitarian
relief for
our people
at the
website
helpossetianow.org.
I beg the
United
States and
the world to
find out the
truth.
Please hear
our voices.
• Lira
Tskhovrebova
is the
founder of
the
Association
of South
Ossetian
Women for
Democracy
and Human
Rights and
has worked
for more
than a
decade to
improve
relations
between
people of
Georgian and
Ossetian
descent in
the
Caucasus.
Copyright ©
2008 The
Christian
Science
Monitor