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Tbilisi: Abkhazia Caught Between Ethnic And Civic Nationhood

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  • Tbilisi: Abkhazia Caught Between Ethnic And Civic Nationhood

    ABKHAZIA CAUGHT BETWEEN ETHNIC AND CIVIC NATIONHOOD
    Paul Goble

    Georgiandaily
    August 13, 2009

    Vienna, August 13 - The population of the breakaway republic of
    Abkhazia finds itself deeply divided between those backing an
    ethnocentric model in which nationality would play the key role
    and those supporting a civic nation model in which citizenship not
    ethnicity would be the basis of political participation, according
    to a leading Moscow specialist on the region.

    And both because of the ethnic diversity of the republic and because of
    the opposition of the international community to states in which one
    ethnic group is given primacy over others, Sergey Markedonov argues,
    the outcome of this increasingly contentious debate will have a larger
    impact than many might think.

    If the civic model is adopted, there is a chance that the partially
    recognized republic of Abkhazia could develop in a more or less stable
    country on its own. But if the purely ethnic definition is used,
    that could undermine social and political cohesion within Abkhazia
    and increase tensions between Abkhazia and its neighbors.

    The current political debate was touched off by the passage by the
    republic's parliament of amendments to Abkhazia's law on citizenship
    that provided for offering citizenship to ethnic Georgians who had
    returned from the Gal district and who had not compromised themselves
    in the eyes of Abkhazia by fighting against that republic.

    On August 5, representatives of the Abkhaz opposition assembled in
    Sukhumi and demanded that President Sergey Bagapsh not sign the law but
    rather return it to the Popular Assembly for reworking. That is what
    he did, and the following day, the parliament appointed a working group
    to come up with yet another revision in the republic's citizenship law.

    As Markedonov points out, all Abkhaz citizenship legislation
    (as adopted in 1993, 1995, 2002, and 2005) has been based on
    two "underlying principles." On the one hand, all the republic's
    citizenship laws have excluded from citizenship any who "with arms
    in their hands fought against the Abkhaz Republic."

    On the other, he continues, the legislation has been ethno-centric
    in each case, clearly defining Abkhazia as "in the first instance"
    a state of the ethnic Abkhaz, intended as a home not only for those of
    that community living there now but also for the descendents of Abkhaz
    who were expelled from the North Caucasus in the 1860s and 1870s.

    To those ends, the paragraph that the parliament initially voted to
    amend at the end of July specified three groups who could acquire
    Abkhaz citizenship: ethnic Abkhaz regardless of their place or
    residence or passport nationality, representatives of other ethnic
    groups who have lived in the republic "not less than five years,"
    and those who acquire it through naturalization.

    A major reason why the issue of the relationship of citizenship and
    ethnicity is so sensitive in Abkhazia is that unlike Nagorno-Karabakh
    and South Ossetia, "where," Markedonov points out, "there exist
    dominating ethnic communities, the Abkhaz even after military
    actions and the expulsion of the Georgian population do not form an
    overwhelming majority."

    Given population shifts during the course of the violence, there
    are today no universally agreed upon statistics for the ethnic
    make-up of Abkhazia's population, but Markedonov suggests that there
    are 70-80,000 Abkhaz, a roughly the same number of Armenians, some
    35-45,000 ethnic Russians, and 55-60,000 ethnic Georgians concentrated
    in the Gal district.

    Consequently, the parliament's approval of a measure that would extend
    citizenship to the ethnic Georgians could easily tip the political
    balance in Abkhazia not only domestically but in its relations with
    Georgia and other countries, and not surprisingly, therefore, many
    who opposed such a move denounced its supporters as "traitors."

    This emotional reaction has been fuelled in addition by the
    anticipation of the upcoming presidential elections in Abkhazia with
    both the incumbent president and his opponents concluding that victory
    of one or the other may depend on just who gets to vote, something
    the citizenship legislation will establish.

    Extending Abkhaz citizenship to the ethnic Georgians of the Gal
    district thus appears to many as an "either/or" issue, Markedonov says:
    "either apartheid (this model was realized after the completion of
    the conflict) or attempts at integration (which the Abkhaz powers
    that be began to make very timidly beginning in2005)."

    There is, of course, "a third variant," the Moscow expert points out,
    yielding the territory and its people to Georgia. "But if one speaks
    seriously," that is not possible and there is a compelling need for
    some compromise, possibly on extending Abkhaz citizenship to those
    who lived in Gal in 1994-99 and also to ethnic Georgians lacking
    Georgian citizenship.

    But Markedonov suggests that Abkhazia needs to find a way to include
    the ethnic Georgians in the Abkhaz political community lest they become
    "a fifth column" and a source of new tensions. As a result, he says,
    "Abkhaz politicians will be forced to return to the issue of broadening
    the basis of Abkhaz citizenship" whether they want to or not.
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