Escalation and outbreak On the evening of October 3, 2001, a joint Georgian-Chechen force of approximately 400–500 men (
another source claims ~1000 men), led by commander
Ruslan Gelayev, entered the gorge from the Georgian side. They attacked and captured the village of Georgievskoe in the
Gulripshi district of Abkhazia, On October 8, at approximately 9:20 AM, a
United Nations Observer Mission in Georgia (UNOMIG) helicopter was shot down over the Kodori Gorge near
Lake Amtkeli. The aircraft was struck by grenade launchers or missile projectiles, resulting in the deaths of all nine or ten people on board.
Intensification of combat That same night, unidentified assailants launched an attack on the village of Naa (alternatively spelled Haa), allegedly supported by air cover. The assault resulted in the deaths of 14 people, including one Russian citizen. Concurrently, President
Eduard Shevardnadze offered the use of Georgian airspace to the United States for operations in Afghanistan. On October 9, at approximately 5:10AM alleged unidentified helicopters flew over village of Omarishara from the direction of Sakeni, then at 6:00AM, four
SU-25 jets of unknown allegiance bombed Omarishara, during the rest of the day, nine unidentified aircraft bombed several villages in the Georgian-controlled portion of the gorge. Throughout this period, the Russian Air Force conducted strikes against Chechen fighters who had infiltrated the area. thereafter, around 100 Gelayhev aligned fighters broke out of the encirclement on the 13th of October.
Political and military shifts On October 11, Georgia deployed reinforcements to its positions in the gorge as a defensive measure. The following day, the Georgian Parliament voted 157–2 in favor of the withdrawal of CIS peacekeepers from Abkhazia. Air strikes by Abkhaz helicopters against rebel positions continued on October 16. By October 17, Abkhaz defense officials claimed that the lower valley had returned to their control, while Georgian authorities reported ten Russian Su-25 jets violating their airspace near
Mestia. On October 30, a political crisis emerged in Tbilisi following a raid on a television station Rustavi-2, which nearly resulted in a coup against the government. == Aftermath ==