22
TBILISI, Georgia—An independence movement demonstration, 1989

Georgia

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

 

Citation preview

Page 1: Georgia

TBILISI, Georgia—An independence movement demonstration, 1989

Page 2: Georgia

ABKHAZIA, Georgia—Ethnic Georgians are bused by Abkhaz military to the Enguri River cease-fire line in order to be expelled, Nov. 10, 1993.

Page 3: Georgia

TBILISI, Georgia—During chaos in Tbilisi, the bakers opened for only an hour on alternative days, causing a free-for-all, 1993.

Page 4: Georgia

ABKHAZIA, Georgia—The burial of a peasant killed by a mine. During the war, he had fled his village. He was harvesting in a minefield to feed his family, 1993

Page 5: Georgia

ABKHAZIA, Georgia—The reburial of about 120 Abkhaz soldiers who had been killed six months earlier in a Georgian ambush. After the takeover of Abkhazia by the Abkhaz forces, they exhumed the bodies, and families came to indentify them. A woman wears a gas mask because of the smell, 1993.

Page 6: Georgia

ABKHAZIA, Georgia—Celebrations during the anniversary of the victory in the Abkhaz-Georgian war, 1995.

Page 7: Georgia

GORI, Georgia—The town where Stalin was born. An officer from the Russian peacekeeping forces in South Ossetia praises Stalin and the day of his birth, 1995

Page 8: Georgia

GEORGIA—Mengrelian refugees wait to go back to the Abkhaz-occupied Gali district in southern Abkhazia, 1996.

Page 9: Georgia

TBILISI, Georgia—A Georgian refugee from Abkhazia. Some 250,000 Georgians fled Abkhazia during the 1992-93 war. Many hotels were turned into refugee centers, 1999.

Page 10: Georgia

GEORGIA—1995.

Page 11: Georgia

UJGULI, Georgia—At Murkumeli cemetery a meal is offered to celebrate the deceased, 1999.

Page 12: Georgia

TBILISI, Georgia—1947.

Page 13: Georgia

GEORGIA—Several thousand Chechen refugees live in Pankisi Gorge, 2000

Page 14: Georgia

TBILISI, Georgia—Georgian refugees from the breakaway Republic of Abkhazia live in train carriers, 1996.

Page 15: Georgia

GEORGIA—Chechen refugees protest against Russia, October 2000.

Page 16: Georgia

GEORGIA—1995.

Page 17: Georgia

TBILISI, Georgia—1990.

Page 18: Georgia

TBILISI, Georgia—After several weeks of protest, opposition demonstrators overrun police barricades, storm the parliament’s first session and force President Shevardnadze to abandon the parliament and his chancellery. Pro-Shevardnadze demonstrators are chased away. The police force changed sides, and opposition demonstrations and vigils took place in front of the Georgian Parliament, Nov. 22, 2003.

Page 19: Georgia

SOKHUMI, Abkhazia—Although Abkhazia is isolated, half-abandoned, and still suffering war wounds due to its unrecognized status, both locals and Russian tourists are drawn to the warm waters of the Black Sea, 2005. This unrecognized country, on a lush stretch of Black Sea coast, won its independence from the former Soviet republic of Georgia after a fierce war in 1993

Page 20: Georgia

TBILISI, Georgia—2006.

Page 21: Georgia

IRAQ—A Georgian soldier carrying ballots for their national election, January 2008

Page 22: Georgia

GEORGIA—1995