Criticism by the G7 group of nations of Russia's actions in Georgia is biased and groundless, Russian officials have said.
The G7 was trying to justify Georgian aggression towards the breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, Russia's Foreign Ministry said.
The G7 had accused Russia of breaking international law by recognising the two provinces as independent.
Russia and Georgia fought a brief Russian invasion of Georgia inadmissible - Czech ForMin ...
Seven Czechs leave Georgia, no Czech in area of fighting-official ...
Tensions flare on Georgian borders ...
EU, Russia Open Talks on New Strategic Partnership ...
Russia warns Georgia over troop detention ... war earlier this month over the issue.
The ministry accused the G7 of making "baseless assertions about Russia undermining Georgia's territorial integrity".
"This step is biased and is aimed at justifying the aggressive actions of Georgia," the ministry said.
The new statement comes a day after Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin stoked up the war of words with the US.
He told CNN there was a "suspicion" that the Georgian conflict was created by someone in the US in the hope of benefitting one of the candidates in the presidential elections.
The White House dismissed Mr Putin's assertions as "not rational".
Meanwhile, officials in the Moscow-backed South Ossetian government have been quoted as saying Russia intends to absorb the breakaway province within "several years".
Parliamentary speaker Znaur Gassiyev said the move had been agreed at high-level talks in Moscow earlier this week, the Associated Press reported.
The Kremlin has not yet commented on the claims.
(BBC)
<< Back
