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Saakashvili dilemma: territorial autonomy and conflict

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  • Saakashvili dilemma: territorial autonomy and conflict

    Caucaz.com, Georgia
    Feb 23 2005

    Saakashvili dilemma: territorial autonomy and conflict


    By Pierre JOLICOEUR, researcher in the Centre of Foreign Policy and
    Security Studies - Montreal in Montreal (Canada)


    The death of Georgian Prime Minister, Zurab Zhvania, and the debates
    for the appointment of his successor held center stage in Georgia
    early February. And thus, president Mikhail Saakashvili's peace
    proposal for South-Ossetia conflict, presented on January 26th at the
    Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe in Strasburg, was
    pushed into the background.

    And yet, this is a major breakthrough for the South-Ossetian issue,
    especially within the context of heigthened tensions in the
    secessionist territory during last year. By doing so, the regime from
    the Rose Revolution has drawn up a first formal peace proposal for
    the frozen conflict, by offering Tskhinvali a status of autonomy.

    By itself the territorial autonomy would be a breakthrough for the
    Ossetians. This status was unilaterally taken away from then by
    former Georgian president Zviad Gamsakhurdia, and this ended up in
    the 1991-1992's conflict.

    With this new proposal, Saakashvili offered to South-Ossetia an
    autonomy wider than it was before the conflict, and also an
    integration into the Georgian constitution. But this offer is still
    not enough for the South-Ossetians. As a matter of fact South-Ossetia
    being currently fully out of Tbilisi's control, integrating Georgia
    would be a step back from the point of view of the radicalists. This
    would mean giving up their de facto independence.

    Indeed Tbilisi's proposal is quite astonishing since at the time it
    was done, the observers were rather expecting that the Georgian
    president makes an announcement for the other frozen conflict :
    Abkhazia. Rumours had that he would offer Abkhazians to associate
    with the Georgian Sate in the framework of a federation, thus
    radically changing the Georgian State from a unitary structure into a
    multiple structure.

    But rather than open the doors to Sukhumi's leaders, Saakashvili
    raised his voice toward them by stating that there was no more
    interlocutor on the Abkhazian side since those ones had left the
    negotiations table. This statement, in addition of the South-Ossetian
    offer, has increased the pressure put up on the Abkhazians.

    Generally speaking, federalism and territorial autonomy are
    considered as good solutions to secessionist conflict, somekind of
    compromise between the contradictory principles of people's right for
    self-determination and the respect of States' territorial integrity.
    However, it may happen that this kind of settlement, instead of
    leading to the wished stability, causes a certain instability.

    For instance, after the falldown of USSR and former Yugoslavia, the
    political elite of the federated republics turned toward local
    nationalist movements partly as a result of the federal structure of
    those States. Indeed the secessionist movements were able to take off
    and organize themselves politically for the very existence of their
    political identity and local institutions.

    In a certain way, the same happened in the Georgian autonomous
    territories - as well as in Nagorno-Karabakh or Chechnya. Those
    examples demonstrate that it might turn out to be hazardous to offer
    mobilized ethnic groups administrative borders, a local
    administration and all kinds of political institutions that may get
    used to organize a secessionist movement in case there be a
    motivation to do so. In an atmosphere of suspicion, it often takes
    only the presence of a manipulating elite to turn the territorial
    autonomy into a secessionist logic.

    Considering the recent history of communist federations, it is
    legitimate to wonder about the mid and long-term stability of federal
    and quasi-federal regimes in this region. Nevertheless, given that
    the secessionist territories are currently not within Tbilisi's
    jurisdiction, putting back those self-proclaimed republics under the
    Georgian aegis, whatever be their special political status, would be
    a breakthrough for Georgia in the short-term.
    In this context, Saakashvili does not have any other choice than to
    opt for the solution of a territorial autonomy in case he is looking
    for a common ground with secessionist forces, even if this choice is
    risky.
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