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Georgia strives to burnish image amid Ajaria crisis

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  • Georgia strives to burnish image amid Ajaria crisis

    Eurasianet Organization
    April 28 2004

    GEORGIA STRIVES TO BURNISH IMAGE AMID AJARIA CRISIS
    Alex van Oss: 4/28/04

    Amid a constitutional crisis involving the renegade region of Ajaria,
    Georgian leaders have waged a diplomatic offensive to bolster
    Georgia's international image. In the United States, Georgian Prime
    Minister Zurab Zhvania has touted his government as "one of the most
    competent" in the former Soviet Union. Meanwhile, President Mikheil
    Saakashvili was promoting trade ties during a tour of Ukraine and
    Poland.

    Since the Soviet collapse in 1991, Georgia has been riven by civil
    strife and economic dysfunction. [For additional information see the
    Eurasia Insight archive]. At a public appearance in Washington on
    April 26, Zhvania emphasized that with Saakashvili's reform-minded
    administration in place, Georgia should no longer be viewed as a
    "failed state." Since January, Georgia has made great strides in
    curbing corruption, long seen as the single most daunting obstacle to
    Georgia's stabilization, Zhvania maintained.

    "Formerly untouchable gangsters are now in prison, so people now have
    physical security. This is just a beginning," Zhvania said during the
    appearance, sponsored by the Center for International and Strategic
    Studies. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. "The
    Minister of Finance [Zurab Nogaideli] has put an end to absolute
    chaos...and, for the first time in Georgia's history, is paying
    refugees their pensions without a single day of delay - though, of
    course, these pensions are still miserably low."

    Progress in the battle against corruption is making Georgia a safer
    investment risk, Zhvania contended.

    "Georgia's energy sector was unbelievably corrupt," he said. "They
    [energy-sector officials] had ways of seizing money that were almost
    state-of-the-art. ... Our current interior minister [Giorgi
    Baramidze], though only 29, is the most competent we've ever had.
    Already, he has a 16-month plan in place to reconstruct and make the
    energy sector more attractive for investment."

    Zhvania suggested that Georgia was now in position to promote
    stabilization in the broader Caucasus region, adding that Tbilisi
    could potentially help foster the normalization of relations between
    Armenia and Azerbaijan. He added that during recent visits to
    Azerbaijan and Armenia, Saakashvili had been "inspired by the
    increased pragmatism" shown by the leaders of those nations, along
    with a new sense that "all three countries live in one region." There
    had even been requests, Zhvania said, for Georgia to serve as a venue
    for regular discussions on improving regional cooperation.

    The uncertainty surrounding the Ajaria issue clouded Zhvania's
    generally sunny assessment of Georgian stabilization efforts.
    Saakashvili's efforts to restore the central government's authority
    in all of the country's constituent entities have brought Tbilisi to
    the brink of armed confrontation with Ajaria on several occasions in
    recent months. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Tbilisi-Batumi tension is once again spiking. On April 28, Ajarian
    leader Aslan Abashidze confirmed that armed forces loyal to his
    regional authority had been mobilized to repel a potential attack by
    Tbilisi. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Zhvania said the Ajaria issue was "not a dispute between Georgia's
    central and regional governments, or between Saakashvili and
    Abashidze. It is Georgia's attempt to restore democracy." He insisted
    that Abashidze has steadfastly refused to act within Georgia's new
    democratic framework, going on to recount a conversation he had with
    Abashidze earlier in April. "I offered to [Abashidze] that if he
    began a general disarmament, he could keep a small force for personal
    security and stay in office to the end of his elected term. But he
    must stop attacking people and journalists," Zhvania said. "He
    refused even to talk about it."

    Meanwhile, in Ukraine, Saakashvili indicated that the Ajaria issue
    would be resolved quickly. "Aslan Abashidze has no chance," Imedi TV
    quoted Saakashvili as saying April 27. "The time for such people is
    over. I think that gradually - not gradually but very soon -
    everything will be settled."

    Saakashvili has been away from Georgia during most of the recent
    crisis. On April 28 he arrived in Poland, following a three-day stay
    in Ukraine. His tour has so far been devoted to boosting commerce. In
    Kiev, Saakashvili took action to encourage free trade between Georgia
    and Ukraine.

    Georgian officials insist that they have no plans to use force to
    resolve the Ajaria standoff. In Washington, Zhvania called on the
    United States and Russia to exert pressure on Abashidze to
    "compromise." According to White House spokesman Scott McClellan, US
    President George W. Bush discussed Georgian domestic developments
    with Russian leader Vladimir Putin during an April 26 conversation.

    Russian leaders have tended to view Saakashvili's administration as
    the aggressor in the Tbilisi-Batumi standoff. On April 28, the
    Russian Duma adopted a statement that expressed concern over the
    recent escalation of tension, the Civil Georgia web site reported.
    "We have all reasons to suppose that Tbilisi plans to use force for
    the conflict resolution," the Duma statement said. It went on to
    recognize that the Ajaria matter was an "internal affair," but it
    stressed that the issue had the potential to adversely impact Russian
    national security.

    During face-to-face discussions April 27, top Bush administration
    officials reportedly pressed Zhvania for assurances that Tbilisi
    would do everything possible to avoid violence in Ajaria, Civil
    Georgia reported. "Everybody understands that presence of illegal
    armed groups in one of Georgia's regions is inadmissible and the
    problem should be solved once and forever through peaceful means,"
    Zurab Zhvania told Georgian reporters just before holding talks with
    US Secretary of State Colin Powell.


    Editor's Note: Alex van Oss is a freelance journalist based in
    Washington, DC.
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