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TBILISI: Groups In Samtskhe-Javakheti Advocate Autonomy

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  • TBILISI: Groups In Samtskhe-Javakheti Advocate Autonomy

    GROUPS IN SAMTSKHE-JAVAKHETI ADVOCATE AUTONOMY

    Civil Georgia, Georgia
    Sept 26 2005

    A group of non-governmental organizations based in Georgia's southern
    region of Samtskhe-Javakheti, which is predominately populated by
    ethnic Armenians, held a conference on September 23-24 and discussed
    current problems in the region.

    In a resolution adopted at the conference, the Council of Armenian
    non-governmental organizations in Samtskhe-Javakheti called on the
    Georgian leadership to consider granting autonomy to the region with
    "broad authority for self-governance, including the right to hold
    elections for all bodies of governance," the Russian news agency
    regnum reported on September 26.

    Text of the resolution also says that by offering the broadest form of
    autonomy to South Ossetia and Abkhazia the Georgian authorities are
    "discriminating other ethnicities living in Georgia - the rights of
    [other ethnicities] who have demonstrated civil loyalty are being
    ignored."

    "Meanwhile, those regions who have violated the country's territorial
    integrity [South Ossetia, Abkhazia], are offered solutions, which
    should also be available for [ethnic populations] densly residing in
    some of the regions of the country," the resolution says.

    Participants of the conference stated that a federal arrangement
    of Georgia could be the best solution to the problem and called on
    the Georgian leadership to consider creating a "Samtskhe-Javakheti
    Parliament through free and direct elections, which would be authorized
    to carry out cultural, education social and economic policies, as
    well as [will be authorized] to protect public order."
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