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・ 2006 Men's Arab Volleyball Championship
・ 2006 Men's British Open Squash Championship
・ 2006 Men's European Volleyball League
・ 2006 Men's European Water Polo Championship
・ 2006 Men's European Water Polo Championship Qualifier
・ 2006 Men's Hockey Champions Trophy
・ 2006 Men's Hockey World Cup
・ 2006 Kharkiv supermarket bombings
・ 2006 Kids' Choice Awards
・ 2006 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes
・ 2006 King's Cup
・ 2006 Kingfisher Airlines Tennis Open
・ 2006 Kingfisher Airlines Tennis Open – Singles
・ 2006 Kisima Music Awards
・ 2006 KNSB Dutch Single Distance Championships
2006 Kodori crisis
・ 2006 Kolkata leather factory fire
・ 2006 Kolmonen – Finnish League Division 3
・ 2006 Korea National League
・ 2006 Korea National League Championship
・ 2006 Korea Open
・ 2006 Korean FA Cup
・ 2006 Korean FA Cup Final
・ 2006 Korean League Cup
・ 2006 Kraft Nabisco Championship
・ 2006 Kremlin Cup
・ 2006 Kremlin Cup – Men's Doubles
・ 2006 Kremlin Cup – Men's Singles
・ 2006 Kremlin Cup – Women's Doubles
・ 2006 Kremlin Cup – Women's Singles


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2006 Kodori crisis : ウィキペディア英語版
2006 Kodori crisis

The 2006 Kodori crisis erupted in late July 2006 in Abkhazia's Kodori Gorge, when a local militia leader declared his opposition to the Government of Georgia, which sent police forces to disarm the rebels. The upper part of the Kodori Gorge was at that time the only portion of Abkhazia, Georgia's breakaway republic, not controlled by the Abkhaz authorities.
==Background==

The Kodori Gorge, with its forested landscapes and rocky hills, lies in the Greater Caucasus mountains, in the northeastern corner of Abkhazia. In spite of several Abkhaz attempts to gain hold of this strategic gorge inhabited by the Svans, a local subgroup of the Georgian people, the upper part of the gorge has never been under the control of the secessionists since the Abkhazian war. It has remained under precarious control of the central Georgian government, but the government of the area has effectively been run, until the recent crisis, by a local authority and warlord Emzar Kvitsiani, who previously led the defense of the gorge against the Abkhaz separatist forces in the capacity of the commander of the local ''Monadire'' (literally: "Hunter") militia force and an envoy of the former President of Georgia named Eduard Shevardnadze. After the ouster of Shevardnadze in the bloodless Rose Revolution in 2003, the new Georgian government disbanded the Monadire force and abolished Kvitsiani's post. There have also been strong suspicions about Kvitsiani's involvement in smuggling and other criminal activities like providing shelter to several criminal authorities, wanted by Georgian police.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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