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New Unrest In Javakheti Prompts Warning From Yerevan

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  • New Unrest In Javakheti Prompts Warning From Yerevan

    NEW UNREST IN JAVAKHETI PROMPTS WARNING FROM YEREVAN
    By Zaal Anjaparidze

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    The Jamestown Foundation
    Wednesday, October 12, 2005

    Akhalkalaki, the main town in the predominantly Armenian-populated
    and Armenia-bordered Samtskhe-Javakheti region of Georgia, was the
    site of an anti-government protest rally on October 5. The incident
    reaffirmed that this turbulent region remains unstable, despite the
    Georgian government's efforts to normalize the situation there.

    The unrest began after tax officials from Tbilisi, conducting a
    routine inspection of local retailers, closed 10 shops for financial
    irregularities. The shop owners, mostly ethnic Armenians, and about
    300 supporters, evidently influenced by local provocateurs, gathered
    outside the Akhalkalaki district administration building to protest
    the alleged violation of the Armenians' rights. The protestors's
    complaints quickly moved from economic issues to political demands
    such as stopping the closure of Russian military bases and granting
    political autonomy for the region.

    Local police dispersed the rally using rubber truncheons and firing
    shots in the air. The clash between the authorities and the protesters
    left several people injured. The police efforts to break up the rally
    instead prompted more residents of Akhalkalaki and nearby villages
    to join the protest, making the situation even tenser.

    Civic groups based in Samtskhe-Javakheti, as well as some Russian
    sources, have alleged that the government deliberately planned
    the brutal end to the protest in order to intimidate the local
    Armenian population following local demands for political autonomy
    in the region. A council of local non-governmental organizations,
    meeting September 23-24, adopted a resolution calling on the Georgian
    government to grant autonomy to the region (see EDM, September 29).

    Javakhk-Info, the local news agency, distributed a bellicose statement
    by regional Armenian non-governmental organizations saying that the
    aggressive behavior by the Georgian authorities towards the region's
    ethnic Armenians leaves them "no other choice than the use of force
    to protect their interests and dignity" (Regnum, October 5).

    However, a source in Georgian law enforcement told Kavkas Press that
    the police shot into the air only after one of the protesters had
    taken a shot first (Kavkas Press October 5).

    Giorgi Khachidze, the presidentially appointed governor of the region,
    managed to calm the angry crowd through negotiations.

    Khachidze criticized the police for excessive use of force and
    promised to hold some of them accountable. "In my opinion, they had no
    right to fire shots, even in the air," he said (TV-Rustavi-2, October
    6). Meanwhile, Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili hailed the police
    actions, saying, "there is no serious problem" and emphasizing that
    law-enforcement officials were merely maintaining order in a region
    that had been poorly controlled in recent years (TV-Imedi, October 6).

    Saakashvili and other Georgian officials have tried to downplay the
    latest events in Akhalkalaki, claming that the radical organizations
    advocating autonomy for the region do not enjoy serious popular
    support.

    Georgian Interior Minister Vano Merabishvili told the Armenian
    newspaper Aikakan Jamanak that Tbilisi welcomes autonomy
    for Javakheti so long as that means no more than ordinary
    self-governance. Merabishvili said he is not interested in the
    Javakheti civic groups expressing political ambitions. "We are going
    to listen to the elected deputies," he said (Regnum, October 6-7).

    A diplomatic warning from Yerevan snapped the Georgian authorities out
    of their complacency. On October 8, Garnik Isagulian, national security
    aide to Armenian President Robert Kocharian, warned Tbilisi to show
    restraint when dealing with the predominantly Armenian-populated
    Samtskhe-Javakheti. Of the October 5 clash, Isagulyan commented,
    "Georgian authorities should be extremely cautious and attentive
    in their actions, because any minor provocation could turn into a
    large-scale clash." Isagulian also dismissed rumors about Russian
    intelligence playing a role in recent events in Samtskhe-Javakheti
    (Regnum, Civil Georgia, October 8).

    However, the Russian media's wide and largely biased coverage of
    the October 5 unrest in Akhalkalaki, routinely voicing the Kremlin's
    position, suggests that Russia is not a mere observer.

    Georgian media have long speculated that Russia and several radical
    Armenian groups are behind the provocations in Javakheti. Van Baiburt,
    an Armenian member of the Georgian parliament, confirmed this in an
    interview with GazetaSNG.ru. Meanwhile, Levon Mkrtichyan, from the
    Armenian Dashnaktsutiun party, one of the alleged supporters of the
    Javakheti radical organizations, insisted that Javakheti Armenians
    advocate only for cultural autonomy.

    The Armenian newspapers are increasingly linking the recent unrest
    in Samtskhe-Javakheti with the construction of the Kars-Akhalkalaki
    railway, which bypasses Armenia. They suggest that as Georgia
    increases its ties with Azerbaijan and Turkey, Armenia may be left
    isolated. Armenian papers also argue that if Georgia's national
    interests conflict with those of Armenia, Tbilisi "should not be
    astonished at the eruption of a natural expression of self-preservation
    and self-defense among the Samtskhe-Javakheti population."

    As the problem becomes increasingly complicated, Tbilisi will be
    forced to act. When he visited Armenia on September 29-30, Georgian
    Prime Minister Zurab Nogaideli stated that Georgia would not implement
    any programs directed against Armenia. Meanwhile, Nogaideli publicly
    underlined that regional autonomy in Georgia is only available for
    Abkhazia, South Ossetia, and Ajaria.

    Nogaideli's Armenian trip, coming on the heels of the demands
    for autonomy in Samstkhe-Javakheti, suggests that stability in
    Samtskhe-Javakheti greatly depends on Yerevan's good will, as
    Tbilisi has always appealed to the Armenian government to mediate
    serious disturbances in the region. Saakashvili's government, which
    inherited the unresolved problems of Samtskhe-Javakheti from former
    president Eduard Shevardnadze, follows the same pattern. Saakashvili,
    like Shevardnadze, strives to resolve the region's problems with
    short-term decisions (see EDM, March 23, May 24, August 3).

    Meanwhile, Yerevan is gaining more leverage to manage the situation
    in Samtskhe-Javakheti and may be clandestinely urging Tbilisi to
    reconcile itself to this fact.
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