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NK Conflict Hangs Over Georgia's Armenian-Populated Regions

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  • NK Conflict Hangs Over Georgia's Armenian-Populated Regions

    NK CONFLICT HANGS OVER GEORGIA'S ARMENIAN-POPULATED REGIONS
    By Zaal Anjaparidze

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    March 15 2006

    Tensions are running high in Tsalka and Akhalkalaki, two regions of
    Georgia that are predominantly populated by ethnic Armenians.

    The latest problem began in Tsalka on March 9, when a trivial brawl
    at a restaurant between local Armenians and Georgians resulted in the
    death of Gevork Gevorkian, a 24-year-old Armenian, and injuries to
    four other Armenians. However, Maria Mikoyan of the Armenian Union
    in Georgia (Nor Serund) claimed that the fight began because the
    Georgian young men were irritated by the Armenian music playing in
    the restaurant.

    Although police have arrested five Georgian suspects, about 500
    Armenian protesters gathered outside the Tsalka administrative building
    on March 10, calling for prosecution of the suspects. On March 11,
    the upheaval spread to Akhalkalaki, a town in the predominately
    Armenian populated Samtskhe-Javakheti region in southern Georgia.

    About 300 participants in the Akhalkalaki rally were Tsalka
    Armenians. They later took their appeal to the Georgian government
    and demanded that Tbilisi "stop the policy of pressure by fueling
    interethnic tensions" and "stop the settlement of other nationalities
    in Armenian-populated regions." Later, the protesters voiced demands
    related to the right to conduct court proceedings and government
    business in the Armenian language. Specifically, they want the central
    government to make the Armenian language a state language equal to
    Georgian in the Samtskhe-Javakheti region. Reiterating the alleged
    threat to the rights of Armenians in Georgia, the appeal also demanded
    political autonomy for the region.

    The rally soon turned violent. The protesters, mostly youth, left
    the government building and raided a local court chamber, ousting
    a Georgian judge. They also attacked a building on Tbilisi State
    University's Akhalkalaki campus and a local Georgian Orthodox Church.

    Later on Khachatur Stepanian, a representative of the council of
    Armenian civic groups in Samtskhe-Javakheti, which organized the rally,
    attempted to soften the anxiety and called the incident a "provocation"
    staged by "someone else."

    On March 11, leaders of the public movement Multiethnic Georgia and
    the Armenian Union in Georgia complained that police had brutally
    dispersed the rally in Tsalka where "ethnic confrontation is
    increasingly becoming a reason behind crimes." They said that if
    tension in Tsalka and Samtskhe-Javakheti continues, then Tbilisi
    would be forced to establish direct presidential rule there.

    Although Georgian Public Defender Sozar Subari investigated the Tsalka
    incident and ruled it to be a "communal crime," the majority of the
    Armenian communities in these regions consider the incident to be a
    demonstration of ethnic hatred towards Armenians, which they believe
    is the result of the Georgian government's misguided policies towards
    ethnic minorities. They further alleged that Georgian law-enforcement
    agents were working in tandem with those who committed the crime.

    United Javakh, a radical Armenian organization in Samtskhe-Javakheti,
    issued a statement accusing Tbilisi of "discriminatory policies"
    against "the Armenian population of Javakh," the Armenian nomenclature
    for the region. They described the recent dismissal of the region's
    ethnic Armenian judges for ignorance of the Georgian language
    as "cynically trampling on the rights of the Armenian-populated
    region." Georgian authorities insist the judges were dismissed for
    misconduct.

    The United Javakh statement warned about "destructive trends in
    the Georgian government's policy" aimed at artificially creating a
    "climate of ethnic intolerance" and "crushing the will of Javakh's
    Armenian population to protect its right to live in its motherland."

    Finally the statement demands that Tbilisi show "political prudence"
    and put an end to the "infringement" of the Armenian community's
    rights.

    The content and tone of this and previous statements by United Javakh
    and other radical Armenian organizations reportedly have strong
    backing from political forces in Armenia. In fact, the statements
    recall the language used by the Armenian community in Karabakh in its
    relations with the Azerbaijani government before war erupted. Vardan
    Akopian, chair of the Javakh Youth organization, argued, "The current
    situation in Javakheti is a cross between situations in Nakhichevan and
    Karabakh." Several protestors explicitly cited the Karabakh precedent.

    Symptomatically, on October 8, 2005, Garnik Isagulyan, the Armenian
    president's national security advisor, bluntly warned Tbilisi to be
    "extremely cautious" with regard to Samtskhe-Javakheti "because any
    minor provocation can turn into a large-scale clash" (EDM, October
    12, 2005). Various Armenian political parties, officials, and media
    have actively discussed the problems of the Armenian community in
    Samtskhe-Javakheti. Some Armenian members of the Georgian parliament
    linked this activity with the approaching parliamentary elections
    in Armenia.

    Recently Armenian Defense Minister Serge Sarkisian released a paper
    on security issues in which he expressed concern over the situation
    in Samtskhe-Javakheti. The excessively critical tone of the Armenian
    minister towards Tbilisi's policy in Samtskhe-Javakheti reportedly
    alarmed Georgian politicians and analysts, but they preferred to
    stay tight-lipped, perhaps to avoid upsetting the already-complex
    Georgian-Armenian relationship (EDM, August 3, June 7, May 24, March
    23, 2005). Russia has tried to capitalize on the problem by fueling
    tensions in Akhalkalaki, location of a Russian military base slated
    for closure.

    Although the Georgian government is continuously downplaying the
    ethnic aspects of the disturbances in Armenian-populated regions,
    this factor appears to lurk beneath the surface. Georgia remains
    Armenia's sole transport route to Russia and Europe due to the ongoing
    blockade by Turkey and Azerbaijan. Thus an unstable Samtskhe-Javakheti
    would hardly be a gain for Yerevan. However, the "Karabakh syndrome"
    should not be removed from the agenda.

    (Resonance, March 9, 11; Akhali Taoba, Civil Georgia, Rustavi-2,
    Regnum, vesti.ru, March 11; Imedi-TV, March 10, 11)
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