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  • Georgia's treatment of Azeri minority raises concerns

    Eurasianet Organization
    June 23 2004

    GEORGIA'S TREATMENT OF AZERI MINORITY RAISES CONCERNS
    Fariz Ismailzade: 6/23/04

    Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev's recent summit meeting with
    President Mikheil Saakashvili took place amidst growing reports of
    official harassment of Georgia's Azeri minority, the country's second
    largest ethnic group. Promises made by Saakashvili to improve living
    conditions for these Azerbaijanis have not been fulfilled, community
    leaders say. The controversy comes as Saakashvili's corruption
    crackdown zeroes in on ethnic Azeri traders in the southern
    Kvemo-Kartli region who are suspected of running smuggling operations
    into Azerbaijan.

    On May 25 more than 400 ethnic Azeris gathered in the district of
    Marneuli to protest what they claim is an ongoing campaign of
    repression by Kvemo-Kartli's governor, Soso Mazmishvili, a member of
    Saakashvili's ruling National Movement bloc. Kvemo-Kartli contains
    most of Georgia's 500,000 ethnic Azerbaijanis, who work primarily as
    rural laborers.

    Protestors said that Saakashvili's campaign promises that they would
    see significant improvements in their living conditions have led to
    little change since the reform leader was elected president in
    January. Power sharing has yet to occur, they say.

    "Azerbaijanis are forced out of their jobs and new people, who belong
    to the ruling clan, are appointed. It does not make a difference if
    these new people can work or not," said Alibala Askerov, the head of
    the national movement "Geyrat" (Honor). "Thus, the new regime is
    trying to make a full change at all of the levels of the governmental
    hierarchy and Mazmishvilli is in charge of this process in
    Kvemo-Kartli."

    Land distribution drives concerns in this regard. More than 70
    percent of local Azeris still are not able to privatize or rent plots
    of land. Locals say that Georgian authorities disproportionately
    favor Georgian farmers in land privatization, thus leaving ethnic
    Azerbaijanis without land or forcing them to rent it from Georgian
    farmers at high prices.

    Resentment at land privatization has been simmering in Kvemo-Kartli
    since ex-President Eduard Shevardnadze's time, but a more recent
    government policy has fanned the flames higher. As part of the
    anti-corruption campaign, security and police forces in early June
    raided the houses of several Azerbaijani businessmen in Kvemo-Kartli
    region and arrested them on charges of trans-border smuggling. Trade
    in agricultural products is the main source of income for Azeris
    living on both sides of the border.

    Meanwhile, the Azerbaijani media is expressing worries about the
    situation in Georgia. Analysts in Baku often see Saakashvili as less
    sympathetic to Azeri Georgians than his predecessor and more intent
    on using nationalism to bolster Georgian morale. On June 8, the
    independent daily Zerkalo warned that the ethnic tensions in
    Kvemo-Kartli region paralleled those that had occurred in Armenia in
    1988 prior to the start of the Nagorno-Karabakh war, a conflict that
    left some 200,000 Azerbaijanis refugees. [For background see the
    Eurasia Insight archive]. Other media outlets have speculated that
    continued discrimination against ethnic Azerbaijanis in Georgia could
    lead to a flood of refugees crossing into Azerbaijan.

    Both Azerbaijan and Georgia have rushed to deny reports in the
    Azerbaijani media of increased discrimination against ethnic
    Azerbaijanis in Georgia and to dispel rumors, reported in the
    Azerbaijani media, that a border checkpoint has been closed.
    Embassies of both countries have released statements asserting that
    the arrests were only intended to combat smuggling and have no
    relationship with ethnic discrimination.

    Instead, both countries are resolutely pushing friendship as their
    official line. Since Saakashvili came to office in November 2003,
    bilateral trade between Georgia and Azerbaijan has tripled to an
    estimated $106 million, and plans to slash railroad freight fees and
    construct a proposed $700-800 million railroad from Azerbaijan to
    Turkey via Georgia could eventually boost that figure higher.
    Saakashvili and Aliyev have also agreed to expand the two countries'
    joint energy projects, a potentially lucrative field currently
    dominated by the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhran oil pipeline, scheduled for
    completion in 2006, and the Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum natural gas
    pipeline, scheduled for construction in 2004.[For background see the
    EurasiaNet archive].

    Official Azerbaijani media outlets and Georgian media appear to have
    skirted the issue of ethnic Azeri complaints altogether in their
    reports of a June 16 visit to Marneuli by President Aliyev to meet
    with representatives of Georgia's Azerbaijani population. "[T]he warm
    brotherly relationship established between Presidents Ilham Aliyev
    and Mikhail Saakashvili is a graphic evidence of [the] inviolability
    of the Azerbaijani-Georgia relation," the official news agency
    AzerTag reported about the event.


    Editor's Note: Fariz Ismailzade is a freelance writer on Caucasus
    geopolitics and economics based in Baku.
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