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ĦĦMOSCOW, Jan. 22 (Xinhua) -- Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili Sunday
blamed Russia for being behind the two gas pipeline explosions in the southern
Russian region of North Ossetia, which has triggered an energy crisis in his
country.
At 3:00 a.m. (0000GMT) on Sunday, the natural gas
pipelines in North Ossetia exploded, cutting off gas supplies to Georgia and
Armenia while the two countries are suffering a cold snap.
Later in the day, another blast hit a high-power
electricity transmission tower west of North Ossetia, causing interruption to
electricity supplies to Georgia.
Russian officials accused the anti-Moscow insurgents
of the attacks. And Russian Deputy Prosecutor General Nikolai Shepel said a
criminal case of sabotage has been launched over the blasts, which were caused
by two explosive devices.
However, Saakashvili remained unmoved by Russia's
explanation and said he believed Russia had deliberately cut off Georgia's gas
supply in a bid to pressure it into giving up ownership of its domestic gas
pipeline network to Moscow, according to news reports reaching here.
"The explanation we have received from the Russian
side is absolutely inadequate and contradictory. Georgia has been subjected to
serious sabotage from the side of the Russian Federation," reports quoted
Saakashvili as saying.
"We have long heard threats from Russian politicians
that we could be left without light and gas, and now this has happened, when
Georgia is experiencing its coldest winter," he was quoted assaying.
Georgia has suffered serious energy shortages for
years. It has been unusually cold this winter, with temperatures plunging to
minus 5 Celsius in the capital Tbilisi on Sunday.
Tbilisi is now using gas left over in the pipelines
and if no alternative solution is found, the city will run out of gas, said
Tbilisi's gas distribution company Tbilgaz.
Meanwhile, many Armenians also shivered in the cold
snap after the gas cutoff, since their country receives all its gas via the same
pipeline as Georgia. And Armenia, like Georgia, does not produce significant
amounts of gas domestically, and they both rely on Russia for the gas imports.
The gas shortfall has prompted Georgia to urgently
seek alternative sources of energy. President Saakashvili and his Azerbaijiani
counterpart Ilham Aliyev discussed the possibility of providing Azerbaijani gas
to Georgia during a telephone conversation Sunday, the Georgian presidential
press service said. Enditem |