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Many Ethnic Conflicts Erupted As Soviet Union Collapsed

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  • Many Ethnic Conflicts Erupted As Soviet Union Collapsed

    MANY ETHNIC CONFLICTS ERUPTED AS SOVIET UNION COLLAPSED
    By Jonathan S. Landay

    McClatchy Washington Bureau
    http://www.mcclatchydc.com/homepage/story/4 6970.html
    Aug 8 2008
    DC

    WASHINGTON -- Until heavy fighting erupted Friday, the feud between
    Georgia and its rebel enclave of South Ossetia was one of the "frozen
    conflicts," or stalemated territorial contests between ethnic groups
    ignited by the former Soviet Union's collapse.

    GEORGIA-SOUTH OSSETIA

    South Ossetia is a mountainous enclave of about 70,000 people bordering
    Russia. One-third of its population is Georgian. Ossetians, who speak
    a language related to Farsi, seek union with North Ossetia, which is
    inside the Russian Federation.

    Georgia, whose 4.4 million people speak Georgian and Russian, voted
    for independence after the former Soviet Union disintegrated in 1991.

    Ethnic clashes erupted in 1989 as the Soviet Union headed toward
    breakup, prompting the deployment of Soviet troops. Sporadic unrest
    continued after Ossetian leaders declared their intention to secede.

    The bloodshed abated after Russia, Georgia and Ossetian leaders agreed
    to form a tripartite peacekeeping force in 1992. But talks failed to
    resolve the standoff, and tensions flared anew after the 2004 election
    of Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili, who declared his intention
    to reclaim the enclave.

    South Ossetia, which receives political and economic support
    from Russia, voted to secede in 2006, but the referendum wasn't
    internationally recognized. The dispute became enmeshed in the larger
    tensions between the United States and Russia over the expansion of
    NATO, which Georgia is seeking to join with American backing.

    GEORGIA-ABKHAZIA

    Georgia also is grappling with breakaway Abkhazia, a region of about
    250,000 people on the Black Sea whose separatist leaders receive
    strong backing from Moscow.

    Ethnic Georgians were a majority of the population there when the
    Soviet Union collapsed and Georgia became independent. Ethnic Abkhaz
    began agitating for independence and fighting erupted, prompting
    Georgia to send in troops.

    Georgia charges that Moscow provided the assistance that allowed
    Abkhaz rebels to drive out the Georgian troops in 1993. Thousands of
    ethnic Georgian civilians also fled.

    U.N. military observers and Russian peacekeeping troops, whom
    Georgia accuses of shielding the separatists, have kept a fragile
    peace. Negotiations have made no progress.

    Abkhazia formally declared independence in 1999, but hasn't been
    internationally recognized. It's under an international economic
    embargo, but receives goods from Russia via rail. Moscow also has
    given Russian passports to most Abkhaz.

    MOLDOVA-TRANS-DNEISTER

    Trans-Dneister, most of whose population speaks Russian and Ukrainian,
    declared independence in 1990 from Moldova, which is dominated
    by Romanian speakers. The declaration has never been recognized
    internationally.

    Hundreds of people died in fierce fighting that erupted after Moldova
    became independent, prompting Russia to send troops. The narrow strip
    of territory between the Dneister River and Ukraine has since gained
    notoriety as a center of international organized crime.

    Trans-Dneister's leaders held a referendum in 2006 that reaffirmed
    the independence declaration and set a goal of union with
    Russia. Negotiations on ending the dispute have made no progress.

    NATO has demanded that Russia withdraw its troops from
    Trans-Dneister. But Moscow continues to maintain a base there,
    ostensibly to protect a stockpile of weapons whose removal the
    separatist leadership has blocked.

    NAGORNO-KARABAGH

    Nagorno-Karabagh is a region in Azerbaijan, an overwhelmingly Muslim
    former Soviet republic. The enclave's population is mainly ethnic
    Christian Armenian.

    Ethnic clashes erupted in 1988, prompting ethnic Azeris to flee
    the enclave and neighboring Armenia, and ethnic Armenians to flee
    Azerbaijan. The number of displaced people is estimated at about
    1 million.

    Heavy combat erupted after the territory declared independence in
    1991 and its intention to unite with Armenia.

    Aided by Armenia, ethnic Armenian forces defeated Azerbaijani forces,
    then pushed beyond Nagorno-Karabagh's limits, creating a buffer zone
    that they still control.

    Up to 30,000 people are thought to have died before Russia brokered
    a 1994 cease-fire. Internationally mediated talks between Azerbaijan
    and Armenia have failed to resolve the dispute.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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