Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Javakheti Armenians Urged To Show Restraint

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Javakheti Armenians Urged To Show Restraint

    JAVAKHETI ARMENIANS URGED TO SHOW RESTRAINT
    By Hovannes Shoghikian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Oct 11 2006

    The head of an organization uniting natives of Georgia's restive
    Javakheti province living in Armenia on Wednesday condemned a local
    Armenian nationalist group that staged violent protests against the
    alleged falsification of local election results.

    The group called United Javakhk rallied hundreds of supporters in the
    regional town of Akhalkalaki and briefly seized a local government
    building on Monday, saying that they were robbed of victory in the
    polls held across Georgia last Thursday. Their official results showed
    the National Movement Party of President Mikhail Saakashvili winning
    the majority of votes in most parts of the country, including the
    Armenian-populated Javakheti. Observers from the Organization for
    Security and Cooperation said the vote was "conducted with general
    respect for fundamental freedoms."

    The leaders of United Javakhk, who demand greater autonomy for
    Javakheti, ran for the Akhalkalaki district council on the ticket of
    Industry Will Save Georgia, a Tbilisi-based major opposition party.

    They claim to have won 70 percent of the vote.

    Maksim Mahtesian, the ethnic Armenian chairman of the district
    election commission, denied the allegations on Tuesday, insisting
    that vote irregularities were not serious enough to affect the
    election outcome. "The situation here is calm now," he told RFE/RL
    from Akhalkalaki.

    In Yerevan, the head of the Javakhk Compatriots' Union, Shirak
    Torosian, denounced the United Javakhk actions as "treason." "We
    are calling on all forces in Javakheti to show prudence, put aside
    personal, factional interests and not serve third forces," he told
    a news conference.

    Torosian also urged Javakheti Armenian activists to drop their demands
    for the impoverished region to be given the status of an autonomy. The
    Georgian government and the international community associate the word
    "autonomy" with separatism these days, he said.

    Incidentally, another Akhalkalaki-based Armenian group demanding
    autonomy, Virk, reportedly teamed up with Saakashvili's party
    to contest the polls and won several council seats. According to
    Mahtesian, 27 of the 32 newly elected members of the legislative
    council are ethnic Armenians.
Working...
X