PACE does not have a unified view on the Russian-Georgian case, the
head of the organziation said at a press-conference in Moscow, RIA
Novosti reports.
Last week, Strasbourg saw the end of the summer session of PACE. One
of its main issues is the Russian-Georgian case. In October 2008 it
had talks on the conflict between the two countries for the first
time. The Assembly earlier proposed to take away Russia's voting
rights.
In the summer session, PACE saw a proposal to freeze the
Russian-Georgian file and turn it into large country-study report. But
the monitoring commission split into two views so no decision was
made. The head of the organziation said that it is the monitoring
commission that will make a decision in the near future.
Speaking about the recently approved resolutions, the head of Assembly
urged everyone to follow them and to allow international organizations
to assist in returning displaced people and investigate violations of
human rights cases.