Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Unity for Georgia a long way off

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Unity for Georgia a long way off

    Reuters AlertNet, UK
    May 6 2004

    ANALYSIS-Unity for Georgia a long way off


    By Niko Mchedlishvili

    TBILISI, May 6 (Reuters) - Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili,
    watched closely by Russia and Western powers, may be a step closer to
    uniting his ethnically-split Caucasus nation; but the hardest is yet
    to come.

    Months of simmering tension in the Black Sea region of Adzhara came
    to an end on Thursday when its autocratic leader Aslan Abashidze fled
    to Moscow, leaving central government to re-establish control.

    But the crisis in Adzhara always focused on two leaders fighting for
    control of resources, including an oil-exporting sea port, rather
    than a struggle over ethnic groups, as is the case in separatist
    Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

    "There's a big difference between Adzharans who see themselves as
    Georgians and Abkhazians who see themselves as Abkhazians," said
    Giorgi Gogia, a Caucasus analyst for think tank International Crisis
    Group (ICG).

    Thousands of Russian peacekeepers and a small group of unarmed United
    Nations military observers still patrol the ceasefire line between
    ex-Soviet Georgia and Abkhazia, an idyllic stretch of the Black Sea
    coast bordering Russia.

    The region fought, and won, a war against Tbilisi in 1992-94 and has
    since held de facto independence, sustaining a limping economy
    through trade and tourism with Russia.

    Deep-seated scars from the war mean that the popular suport that was
    a key factor in Saakashvili's success in toppling both Abashidze and
    his predecessor as Georgian president Eduard Shevardnadze is sorely
    missing in Abkhazia.

    WESTERN, RUSSIAN INTEREST

    "While in Adzhara we had problems between central government and one
    person and his regime, in Abkhazia we have a regime and a whole
    society in conflict with the rest of Georgia," said Archil
    Gegeshidze, senior fellow at the Georgian Foundation for Strategic
    and International Studies.

    Western powers are eager for stability in Georgia, slated as transit
    territory for a key pipeline to pump Caspian oil to the
    Mediterranean. Washington, fearing any spillover of unrest to
    potentially volatile neighbours Armenia and oil-producing Azerbaijan,
    was forthright in criticising separatist Abashidze.

    Tbilisi's ties with its powerful northern neighbour Russia are more
    delicately poised. Moscow, which sees the southern Caucasus as of key
    strategic interest, has in the past given tacit support to separatism
    that has strengthened its hand.

    Georgia said this week rebel militia in Adzhara were led by a retired
    Russian officer and asked the Kremlin to help curb him. Saakashvili,
    clearly at pains not to inflame relations already strained by the
    presence of two Russian bases here, said however he did not believe
    Moscow was behind the rebellion.

    The Georgian leader, elected on pledges to reunite Georgia, revive a
    moribund economy and fight corruption, has given little indication
    how he plans to tackle either Abkhazia or South Ossetia. Abkhazian
    officials say he has nothing to offer.

    "They sent in tanks, warplanes, helicopters," Abkhaz "foreign
    minister" Sergei Shamba told Reuters earlier this year.

    "They decided it was easier to solve the problem through
    force...Well, war changed our relations and to talk now about a
    return to the way things were before is simply not realistic."

    Leaders in Ossetia, a landlocked region in a less strategically
    important area north of Tbilisi, are as scathing. It fought a war
    against Georgia in the dying days of the Soviet Union, seeking
    unification with North Ossetia in Russia.

    Regional chief Eduard Kokoity says he will meet Saakashvili only when
    Georgia admits its "genocide" against Ossetians.

    "The overall perception in Abkhazia is that the Georgians have missed
    the train," said Damien Helly, the ICG's Caucasus project director.

    (Additional reporting by Michael Steen in Moscow)
Working...
X