Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Tbilisi: Georgia's Ethnic Minorities Left In The DArk NATO Membershi

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

  • Tbilisi: Georgia's Ethnic Minorities Left In The DArk NATO Membershi

    GEORGIA'S ETHNIC MINORITIES LEFT IN THE DARK ON NATO MEMBERSHIP
    Shorena Labadze

    Messenger.ge
    Thursday, July 3
    Georgia

    Ethnic minorities in Georgia are less likely to know about and support
    the country's NATO membership bid than other Georgian citizens,
    a local organization which works with minorities said yesterday.

    The group, Public Movement 'Multinational Georgia,' is launching a
    campaign in ethnic minority-populated regions to educate residents
    about the Western military alliance which, its leadership pledged
    this spring, Georgia will one day join.

    "We do not want to see two separate political directions emerging
    in regards to NATO membership, with popular feeling among minorities
    and the [state] center becoming alienated from each other," said Sian
    Davies, a volunteer for the youth union of Multinational Georgia.

    NATO integration has been a foreign policy ambition for two successive
    Georgian governments, but in poorly-integrated ethnic minority areas,
    citizens remain skeptical and uncertain of how they will fare with
    Georgia as a member state.

    The NGO ran focus groups last week in Samtskhe-Javakheti province's
    Akhalkalaki district, which is overwhelmingly ethnic Armenian.

    "Although everyone involved had heard of NATO, most knew only about
    its military activities, associated it with the coalition war in Iraq
    and were unaware of specific benefits NATO membership could bring
    for the Georgian armed forces," said Davies.

    NGO secretary general Ilona Kochoi said that in Akhalkalaki schools,
    teachers aren't informed enough to answer questions about NATO,
    "even though the children are often curious."

    Residents of poverty-mired Akhalkalaki fear Georgian foreign policy
    could ultimately cost them work. In a sense, it already has.

    A Russian military base was once a major employer and economic motor
    for the district. It closed last year, leaving the area bereft of
    jobs and increasingly dependent on remittances from relatives working
    abroad, particularly in Russia.

    Interviewees were worried that NATO membership could make it more
    difficult for them to travel to Russia for work, or could weaken
    state ties with Armenia. Some also fear NATO integration would bring
    Turkish soldiers and military bases to their region, dredging up old
    memories of Turkish persecution.

    Georgian military analyst Koba Liklikadze said ethnic minorities in
    Georgia see NATO as a "hostile organization."

    "They must understand that NATO guarantees not only military safety
    but also defends their interests," he said.

    NATO information centers in Georgia, which are tasked with promoting
    the alliance domestically, say they are making efforts to reach ethnic
    minority residents.

    "We are aware about this problem and it really exists, especially
    in the areas populated with ethnic minorities. From time to time, we
    take NATO representatives and military experts there, hold seminars,
    distribute booklets and other printed materials among the residents,"
    a representative of a NATO information center in Tbilisi said.

    The Saakashvili administration has made the bid to join NATO a
    centerpiece in its foreign policy platform, saying membership in the
    alliance will provide security against Russia and further integrate
    Georgia into the West.

    In the January presidential election this year, Georgians voted on
    a plebiscite asking whether Tbilisi should continue pursuing NATO
    membership.

    63 percent of voters in Akhalkalaki voted for NATO membership,
    according to the Central Election Commission, well below the national
    average of 77 percent.

    Public Movement 'Multinational Georgia' is also planning to talk
    about NATO integration with ethnic Azeri residents in Kvemo Kartli.
Working...
X