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Ethnic Georgians Suspected of Killing An Armenian Youth & Wounding 2

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  • Ethnic Georgians Suspected of Killing An Armenian Youth & Wounding 2

    Armenpress

    ETHNIC GEORGIANS SUSPECTED OF KILLING AN ARMENIAN
    YOUTH AND WOUNDING TWO OTHERS IN GEORGIAN TSALKA

    AKHALKALAKI, MARCH 10, ARMENPRESS: A group of
    Ajarians or Svans (ethnic Georgians) are suspected of
    attacking and stabbing to death a 23-year-old Armenian
    man in Tsalka, in southern Georgia and wounding two
    other young Armenian men.
    A-Info news agency that operates in the
    predominantly Armenian populated region of Javakheti
    in southern Georgia, said the Armenians were attacked
    by a 15-member group in Tsalka on March 9 afternoon at
    a busy section of the town. The killed man was
    identified as Gevorg Gevorkian, resident of Ghushchi
    village. The other two, V. Sahakian and G, Baloyan,
    were rushed to the local hospital with heavy wounds.
    A-Info quoted the wounded Armenians as saying they did
    not know what was the reason behind the attack.
    A special squad of Georgia's interior ministry that
    is deployed in the region under the pretext of
    preventing inter-ethnic clashes, has arrested three
    suspects. The attack on Armenians sparked a protest
    action by local Armenians. A crowd of 300 people
    demonstrated outside the building of the local police
    department demanding a fair trial of the suspects.
    Meantime Georgia's interior ministry has dispatched
    extra officers to the region to foil a fresh
    inter-ethnic clash after the crowd broke the windows
    of the police station. A-Info said police used
    truncheons to disperse the crowd.
    Tsalka, population 22,000, is predominantly
    populated by ethnic Armenians and Greeks. Up to 2,000
    Azerbaijanis also live there. In the early 1990s, the
    Georgian government moved a group of ethnic Georgians
    (about 2,500, mainly Ajarians and Svans), to Tsalka
    after a devastating landslide in their native
    mountainous villages.
    Tsalka is also close to the predominantly
    Armenian-populated Samtskhe-Javakheti locality, which
    is considered a "complex region" because of the
    presence of a Russian military base and increasing
    demands for political autonomy by some local Armenian
    groups. Clashes between ethnic Georgians and the
    Greek-Armenian community in Tsalka have been reported
    for several years, nevertheless, Georgian officials
    continuously argue that the conflicts in Tsalka have
    no ethnic context and represent mostly "communal
    violence."
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