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Timeline: Conflict Between Georgia And South Ossetia

August 08, 2008
November 1989: South Ossetia declares its autonomy from the Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic, triggering three months of fighting.

December 1990:
Georgia and South Ossetia begin a new armed conflict which lasts until 1992.

June 1992:
Russian, Georgian and South Ossetian leaders meet in Sochi, sign an armistice and agree the creation of a tripartite peacekeeping force of 500 soldiers from each entity.

November 1993: South Ossetia drafts its own constitution.

November 1996: South Ossetia elects its first president.

December 2000: Russia and Georgia sign an intergovernment agreement to re-establish the economy in the conflict zone.

December 2001: South Ossetia elects Eduard Kokoity as president, in 2002 he asks Moscow to recognise the republic's independence and absorb it into Russia.

January 2005: Russia gives guarded approval to Georgia's plan to grant broad autonomy to South Ossetia in exchange for dropping its bid for independence.

November 2006: South Ossetia overwhelmingly endorses its split with Tbilisi in a referendum. Georgia's prime minister says this is part of a Russian campaign to stoke a war.

April 2007: Georgia's parliament approves a law to create a temporary administration in South Ossetia, raising tension with Russia.

June 2007: South Ossetian separatists say Georgia attacked Tskhinvali with mortar and sniper fire. Tbilisi denies this.

October 2007: Talks hosted by the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe between Georgia and South Ossetia break down.

March 2008: South Ossetia asks the world to recognise its independence from Georgia, following the West's support for Kosovo's secession from Serbia.

March 2008: Georgia's bid to join NATO, though unsuccessful, prompts Russia's parliament to urge the Kremlin to recognise the independence of South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

April 2008: South Ossetia rejects a Georgian power-sharing deal, insists on full independence.

August 2008: Fighting breaks out between Georgian and separatist South Ossetian forces. Georgia says its forces have "freed" the greater part of the Ossetian capital, Tskhinvali.

Written by Reuters
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