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Tbilisi: Ethnic Minorities And NATO

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  • Tbilisi: Ethnic Minorities And NATO

    ETHNIC MINORITIES AND NATO

    Messenger.ge
    Thursday, July 3
    Georgia

    Georgia's critical bid for membership in NATO has broad, if not
    unquestioning, support here. But ethnic minorities, particularly the
    sizable Armenian and Azeri communities, are in danger of being left
    on the wayside.

    Ethnic minorities in Georgia are unlikely to be well-informed on
    NATO, and less likely than other citizens to support membership in
    the alliance.

    This is in large part another symptom of the weak integration of
    Georgia's ethnic minorities. Most are poor, many do not speak Georgian;
    predictably, they are at best on the margins of civic society and
    practically unrepresented in high office.

    In one ethnic Armenian district, Akhalkalaki, the closure of a Russian
    military base there plunged its residents into even deeper penury. Many
    work in Russia and send money home. Now, among other concerns, they
    fear Georgian membership in NATO could take away that option.

    In a referendum accompanying the January presidential poll, 63 percent
    of Akhalkalaki voters supported the bid for NATO membership, far below
    the national average of 77 percent. And they're hardly a renitent
    bunch: 87 percent picked incumbent Mikheil Saakashvili for president,
    compared to barely half of voters nationwide.

    Their worries are clear. The government is not oblivious; its efforts
    to shore up support for NATO across the whole country should continue
    with strong backing. Georgia needs NATO, and the integration campaign
    will not be helped if the country's impoverished ethnic minorities
    are unhappy about membership.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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