| September 2006 |
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"Certain forces in Russia decided that this autumn is the last time when it is still possible to stop the process of Georgia's formation," Saakashvili said. 
The Tbilisi City Court ruled Friday that 12 members of a Georgian opposition party be kept in custody for two months. 
A treaty establishing a nuclear-free zone in Central Asia will contribute to the fight against terrorism in the region and prevent access by non-state actors to nuclear materials and technologies, the Russian Foreign Ministry said Friday. 
Twelve members of a Georgian opposition party were brought Friday before the Tbilisi City Court. 
Senior Russian officials rejected Friday a claim that Moscow could stop the construction of a controversial nuclear power plant in Iran if the UN imposed sanctions on the Islamic Republic. 
Polish authorities released a Kyrgyz opposition leader detained earlier on alleged drug-trafficking charges, a member of the Kyrgyz parliament said. 
Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko was poisoned during his 2004 election campaign with dioxin made in Russia, the U.S. or Britain, Ukraine's prosecutor general said Friday. 
Russia is ready to meet its international obligations on the destruction of its chemical weapons stockpiles, a Kremlin official said Friday. 
Four people have been killed in the conflict zone between Georgia and its breakaway region of South Ossetia, the commander of the Joint Peacekeeping Force said Friday. 
Israel does not support a Russian initiative to hold an international conference on Mideast conflict resolution, the Israeli foreign minister said Friday. 
Russian Orthodox believers could soon be united in one church after a rift that has outlasted the fall of communism, a Moscow church official said Friday 



