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GEORGIA - Memorandum to the PACE Monitoring Committee on the Situati

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  • GEORGIA - Memorandum to the PACE Monitoring Committee on the Situati

    Memorandum to the PACE Monitoring Committee on the Situation in Samtskhe-Javakheti

    Akhalkalak, A-INFO, 25 October 2004.- The members of the Council of
    Europe Parliamentary Assembly Committee on the honouring of obligations
    and commitments by member states of the Council of Europe (Monitoring
    Committee) is visiting Georgia on 25-26 October 2004.

    During their meetings the monitoring committee members will exchange
    views with the representatives of Georgian Government and Parliament,
    international organizations present in Georgia, international and local
    NGOs and media.

    On this occasion, the Council of Armenian Non-Governmental Organizations
    of the Samtskhe-Javakheti Region in Georgia, on 21 October 2004, have
    sent the following memorandum to the Monitoring Committee.


    M E M O R A N D U M

    THE SITUATION IN THE SAMTSKHE-JAVAKHETI REGION IN GEORGIA
    AND GEORGIA'S OBLIGATIONS AND COMMITMENTS BEFORE THE COUNCIL OF EUROPE

    Submitted to the
    Committee on the Honouring of Obligations and Commitments
    by Member States of the Council of Europe (Monitoring Committee)

    Submitted by the
    Council of Armenian Non-Governmental Organizations
    of the Samtskhe-Javakheti Region in Georgia

    21 October 2004


    As you prepare to hold your next meeting in Georgia, we, the leaders
    of the Armenian nongovernmental organizations of the Samtskhe-Javakheti
    territory in Georgia, attaching great importance to the sovereignty and
    territorial integrity of our country, wish to bring to your attention
    the critical situation in Samtskhe-Javakheti, which if left unresolved,
    could have dire consequences for the population of the territory and
    for Georgia as a whole.

    When joining the Council of Europe in 1999, the following were among
    the obligations and commitments Georgia undertook:

    a) to sign and ratify, within a year after its accession, the Framework
    Convention for the Protection of National Minorities and the European
    Charter for Regional or Minority Languages;

    b) to sign and ratify, within three years after its accession, the
    European Charter of Local Self-Government, [...] and in the meantime
    to apply the fundamental principles of [this] instrument;

    c) to enact, within two years after its accession, a legal framework
    determining the status of the autonomous territories and guaranteeing
    them broad autonomy, the exact terms of which are to be negotiated
    with the representatives of the territories concerned;

    d) to amend, within three years after its accession, the law on
    autonomy and local government to enable all the heads of councils to
    be elected instead of being appointed;

    e) to adopt, within two years after its accession, a law on minorities
    based on the principles of Assembly Recommendation 1201 (1993).

    Five years after accession, Georgia has yet to take steps towards
    fulfilling the above-mentioned commitments and obligations. In fact,
    the process of fulfilling these commitments before the Council of
    Europe has failed, and, inter alia, has made the situation in the
    Samtskhe-Javakheti region critical.

    The 1995 Georgian constitution does not define the administrative
    structure of the country and in practice the district-level
    self-government does not match democratic standards. In the
    Samtskhe-Javakheti region, discriminatory laws and practices have
    left the Armenian population far less represented in the district
    administration. There are no elective bodies on the regional level and
    there is no legislative base for the institution of state commissioners
    appointed by presidential decrees. The present administrative structure
    and the method of governance do not take into account the specifics of
    the region and do not correspond to the needs of the population. The
    system has long demonstrated that it is bankrupt and unfruitful. The
    Samtskhe-Javakheti region has actually been pushed out of the governing
    processes of the country.

    The administrative governance of the region has been frustrated. At
    the local level, flagrant discrimination is practiced against the
    local Armenian population; in contrast to the rest of the country,
    in the Armenian populated areas of Samtskhe-Javakheti most sakrebulos
    (locally elected bodies) incorporate several villages, whereas each
    Georgian populated village has a separate sakrebulo, thus artificially
    increasing the Georgian presence in the rayon (district) level.

    These measures, policies and practices are in direct contradiction
    to the European Charter of Local Self-Government, which Georgia had
    undertaken to sign and ratify within three years after its accession
    and in the meantime to apply the fundamental principles of this
    instrument.

    No short- or long-term socio-economic programs to serve the interests
    of the population are implemented. The poverty and desperation have
    reached threatening levels. Educational and cultural conditions are
    unsatisfactory.

    In the last ten months, we have conveyed our concerns and
    recommendations to the highest authorities in Georgia and to the
    (now former) Secretary General of the Council of Europe, but to no
    avail. All of them have failed to even acknowledge receipt of our
    written communications.

    It is crucial to have the Samtskhe-Javakheti region fully integrated in
    the state, political, socioeconomic and cultural lives of the country.
    But integration is not synonymous to assimilation, neither is autonomy
    to secession. In a democratic society, integration can only be achieved
    through participation. Policies and practices pursuing assimilation
    or artificial and forceful change of demographic realities can only
    result in the opposite. Integration requires that both the majority
    and the minority have the desire for it and the willingness to take
    mutual steps towards each other.

    Under the guise of integration, the Georgian authorities have
    enacted laws which are contrary to the spirit and letter of the
    Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities
    and the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages,
    which Georgia had undertaken to sign and ratify within a year
    after its accession, but has failed to do so after over five years
    following its accession. Furthermore, and in direct contradiction
    of the above-mentioned Framework Convention and European Charter,
    the Georgian authorities have recently introduced a draft law on
    education, which, if enacted, would effectively prevent Georgia's
    national minorities, including the Armenians, from education at all
    levels in their relevant regional or minority languages.

    There is no broad social-political consensus in the country on
    political issues connected with ethnic diversity of Georgia and
    its internal political and administrative systems. The reported
    Armenian ancestry of politicians and public figures is often
    regarded to be derogatory. Whereas the existence of a large number
    of Armenian cultural and religious monuments, as well as historical
    records speak of the fact that in Southern Georgia, including in
    the Samtskhe-Javakheti region, the Armenians are natives, Georgian
    society regards the Armenians in those regions as newcomers. There is
    recorded evidence of attempts to "Georgianize" these monuments. The
    Georgian authorities are sending contradictory messages on how
    national minorities can protect and promote their linguistic and
    cultural rights: whereas, on the one hand, the Georgian authorities
    are undermining the linguistic and cultural rights of the law-abiding
    national minorities, on the other hand, in order to appease those who
    have declared their independence from Georgia, the same authorities
    promise them to protect and promote their language and culture in
    return for restoring Georgian sovereignty on those territories.

    We are convinced that if Georgia completely and sincerely honours
    its accession obligations and commitments, especially those mentioned
    at the beginning of this Memorandum, it would greatly help alleviate
    the serious situation in Samtskhe-Javakheti.

    Hence we appeal to you, the Committee on the Honouring of Obligations
    and Commitments by Member States of the Council of Europe, to ensure
    that Georgia honours its commitments entered into on its accession
    to the Council of Europe. We are at the disposal of your Committee
    for further elaboration and discussion.


    Council of Armenian Non-Governmental Organizations
    of the Samtskhe-Javakheti Region in Georgia
    Akhalkalaki, 21 October 2004
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