On October 8, 2025, the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva once again confirmed its “political short-sightedness” by adopting a resolution on the allegedly occupied territories of Georgia entitled “Cooperation with Georgia”.
Unfortunately, the once-reputable international body began to suffer from tunnel vision syndrome, trampling its own traditions and statutory principles and having completely lost its objectivity, impartiality and professionalism.
Supporters of this resolution “express serious concern about various forms of discrimination and abuses of human rights committed against the ethnic Georgian population in the Russian- occupied regions of Abkhazia and Tskhinvali”. While making such tendentious statements within the walls of the Palais des Nations in Geneva, they even for the sake of decency did not bother themselves to pay tribute to the memory of thousands of innocent victims of the Ossetian and the Abkhaz nationality, killed and mutilated by followers of the criminal ideology of superiority of the Georgian nation.
The authors of this statement should be reminded once again that Georgia is the aggressor and has been recognized as such by the international EU commission headed by Swiss diplomat Heidi Tagliavini. But it is customary not to mention this at the Palais des Nations and other international venues.
Similar double standards in assessing the true state of affairs in the Republic of South Ossetia and the Republic of Abkhazia, ignoring the existing geopolitical realities and groundless accusations of “occupation” against Russia, coupled with fear, confirm the correctness of the decisions undertaken by South Ossetia and Abkhazia to determine independently their own fate, build statehood and develop mutually beneficial cooperation with friendly countries and peoples.
9 October, 2025