Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Ethnic clashes in Armenian-populated district of Samtskhe-Javakheti

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

  • Ethnic clashes in Armenian-populated district of Samtskhe-Javakheti

    Agency WPS
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    July 22, 2005, Friday

    ETHNIC CLASHES TAKE PLACE IN THE ARMENIAN-POPULATED DISTRICT OF
    SAMTSKHE-JAVAKHETI, GEORGIA


    Ethnic clashes were reported in the Armenian-populated district of
    Samtskhe-Javakheti, Georgia, last week-end. Fifteen or so drunken
    Armenians raided and wrecked a Georgian school in Akhalkalaki.
    Proceedings were instituted; nobody has been detained as yet.

    In the settlement of Samsa the locals kicked up a fight with students
    from Tbilisi on a monuments of architecture restoration mission. The
    police evacuated the beaten students, some of them right to the
    nearest hospital.

    Mels Torosjan, one of the chairmen of the Akhalkalaki political
    movement Virk, denies "political undertones".

    The region is viewed as potentially problematic because its
    population is apprehensive of the forthcoming withdrawal of the 62nd
    Russian Military Base from Akhalkalaki. The locals fear that the
    Russians' place will be taken by the Turks (Turkey is a NATO member).
    The Russian military spends a lot of cash in Akhalkalaki paying for
    food and fuel and this is probably the only source of income for the
    locals. Almost every third serviceman of the base is a local Armenian
    who applied for and obtained Russian citizenship.

    Georgian political scientist Paata Zakareishvili is convinced that
    the political leadership should be more attentive to the problems of
    the "Armenian region" because "there are lots of forces there waiting
    for a chance to provoke new incidents." Still, the Armenians are
    skeptical about the authorities' promises to solve their social
    problems and not to deploy foreign troops when the Russians are out.
    Local politicians began talking of forming autonomy back in the
    middle of the 1990's. These speculations died out eventually, thanks
    to a considerable extent to official Yerevan's requests to Georgian
    Armenians not to kick up quarrels with Tbilisi.

    Source: Vremya Novostei, July 19, 2005, p. 5

    Translated by A. Ignatkin
Working...
X