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Vladimir Socor in EDM: Abkhazia: Development aid can be geared towar

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  • Vladimir Socor in EDM: Abkhazia: Development aid can be geared towar

    DEVELOPMENT AID CAN BE GEARED TOWARD CONFLICT RESOLUTION IN ABKHAZIA
    by Vladimir Socor

    Eurasia Daily Monitor -- The Jamestown Foundation
    Monday, July 17, 2006 -- Volume 3, Issue 137

    Georgia is preparing to exercise its sovereign right to demand the
    termination of Russian "peacekeeping" operations on its territory
    and their replacement with genuine international peacekeeping missions.

    Concurrently, Tbilisi is redoubling efforts to unfreeze not the
    conflicts as such (these are not and never were "frozen") but rather
    to unfreeze the frozen negotiations toward political settlements
    in Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Within this context, the role of
    international donor agencies and the functions of development aid in
    the secessionist enclaves requires some overall political rethinking
    and adjustment of goals on the ground.

    Until now, those agencies and aid programs have basically aimed
    to bring at least minimal improvements to living conditions in
    the conflict-torn enclaves. Rarely, if ever, was Western-funded
    development assistance conceived as a tool for advancing political
    resolution of the conflicts, let alone resolution on terms consistent
    with Western interests. This approach should and can now begin to
    change by correlating development aid programs more directly with
    the goals of conflict resolution. Free from Russian influence on
    their decisions, donor agencies are potentially valuable vehicles
    for promoting those goals.

    A new approach along these lines can now be tested in Abkhazia. For
    example, international development aid can contribute significantly to
    the rebuilding and resumption of operations of the railroad section
    between the Psou and Inguri Rivers. A linchpin in the pre-1991
    Trans-Caucasus railroad, that section was destroyed in the 1992-93
    war and awaits reconstruction in a package deal that would also
    provide for the Georgian refugees' safe and orderly return to the
    Gali district. Russia's state railways company lays claim to operating
    that section once it is restored.

    To ensure politically neutral operation of that section, donor
    agencies could facilitate the formation of a Georgian-Abkhaz joint
    technical group. Georgian managers and personnel who ran that railroad
    prior to 1992 were turned into refugees as a result of the conflict,
    and the relevant technical documentation is in Tbilisi since those
    events. Having the railroad operated by a joint Georgian-Abkhaz
    group is clearly preferable to a Russian takeover that would advance
    Abkhazia's de facto incorporation into Russia.

    Moreover, Russian operation of that railroad would probably involve
    deployment of railway troops -- a specifically Russian institution that
    handles many aspects of civilian transport -- to Abkhazia on the excuse
    of protecting that railroad. Meanwhile, an example of Georgian-Abkhaz
    technical cooperation exists at the Inguri hydroelectric power plant,
    jointly and continuously operated since 1994.

    Donor agencies' strategy to promote small-scale private-sector
    projects particularly in farming can also be adjusted to advance the
    resolution of this conflict. In the Ochamchire district, for example,
    such assistance can be channeled to joint farming projects that would
    be undertaken by local Abkhaz residents and Georgian refugees who
    would be returning to their homes in that district. Such projects
    can promote the goal of reversing the ethnic cleansing of Georgians
    -- a goal that can be achieved gradually and with proper economic
    incentives to both sides and is central to a political resolution
    of the conflict. Also in the Ochamchire district there is need for
    an inventory of Georgian-owned houses, preparatory to their eventual
    rebuilding to accommodate any returning refugees.

    In the Gali district, Georgian refugees have returned in fairly
    large numbers to their homes in an unorganized movement that the
    Abkhaz authorities could not stop. However, Abkhaz authorities
    are subjecting those Georgians to various forms of discrimination
    and intimidation. Those problems -- as well as organized crime
    in the Gali and Ochamchire districts -- can best be handled by
    an international police force of several hundred, not by military
    peacekeeping troops, let alone by Russian Army "peacekeepers." For
    their part, donor agencies are well placed to support the provision
    of Georgian-language education in Gali for the returnees' children,
    whom the Abkhaz authorities currently deprive of that right. It
    is also clearly necessary at this stage to support the creation of
    community representation of refugees who returned to Gali.

    Ongoing demographic trends in Abkhazia would also seem to warrant an
    adjustment in the aid focus and a more direct correlation of assistance
    programs to conflict-resolution goals. According to broadly convergent
    estimates by all sides involved, the number of resident ethnic Abkhaz
    has dropped to between 50,000 and 60,000 (from an estimated 90,000
    a decade ago) through social hardships and emigration. The number of
    resident Armenians has slowly but steadily increased to some 55,000
    and may rise further, mainly through immigration from Russia's nearby
    Krasnodar krai, where the authorities condone harassment of Armenians.

    And the number of returning Georgians in Abkhazia has reached some
    55,000, most of them in the Gali district.

    These numbers and these proportions suggest that some political and
    aid dimensions of conflict resolution and post-conflict reconstruction
    are manageable at the local level. By the same token they underscore
    the need to face up to Russia's challenge at the international level,
    first and foremost by pressing for withdrawal of Russian troops to
    clear the way for local processes toward political settlement.

    --Vladimir Socor
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