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Georgia Moves To Alienate South Ossetia, Abkhazia Further

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  • Georgia Moves To Alienate South Ossetia, Abkhazia Further

    Georgian Daily, Georgia
    July 26 2009



    Georgia Moves To Alienate South Ossetia, Abkhazia Further

    July 26, 2009

    The working group on territorial integrity and local self-government,
    one of nine created within the framework of the 70-member commission
    set up to draft amendments to the Georgian Constitution, proposed on
    July 22 dropping from the reworked constitution the designation "South
    Ossetia" in favor of "Tskhinvali region," Caucasus Press reported.

    That region will have unspecified "special status" with "an
    unspecified degree of autonomy," according to working group chairman
    Kakhi Kurashvili. Abkhazia and Adjara will be designated autonomous
    republics within Georgia with the right to adopt their own
    constitutions -- a right that South Ossetia apparently will not
    share. In all, Georgia will comprise 13 territorial units.

    The working group's proposal is comparable with the decision taken in
    November 1990, in violation of a pre-election pledge by then-Georgian
    parliament chairman Zviad Gamsakhurdia to abolish South Ossetia's
    status as an autonomous oblast within Georgia. It was that reversal by
    Gamsakhurdia that triggered fighting between informal Ossetian and
    Georgian militias in early 1991 that culminated in Tbilisi's ultimate
    loss of control over South Ossetia in 1992.

    The successive peace proposals for Abkhazia and/or South Ossetia
    unveiled by President Mikheil Saakashvili in September 2004, January
    2005, and July 2005, and by then-Georgian Prime Minister Zurab
    Noghaideli in October 2005, all offered only "broad autonomy" to the
    two breakaway republics, and for that reason were immediately and
    unconditionally rejected. Russia formally recognized both Abkhazia and
    South Ossetia as independent states in August 2008; the only other
    country to follow suit was Nicaragua.

    The very term "autonomy" in the post-Soviet context is anathema
    because Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republics and Autonomous Oblasts
    within the framework of the USSR did not in practice have any leeway
    in taking even the most minor decisions. It was this perceived
    inequality that gave rise to the mass anti-Georgian protests in
    Abkhazia in the spring of 1978, and to the demand in February 1988 by
    the oblast soviet of the then Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast for
    the region's transfer from Azerbaijani jurisdiction to the Armenian
    SSR.

    In his July 23 address to the Georgian parliament, U.S. Vice President
    Joe Biden called on lawmakers "to keep the doors open to the Abkhaz
    and South Ossetians, so that they know they have other options besides
    the status quo," however difficult such overtures might be. He further
    urged parliamentarians to build "a peaceful and prosperous Georgia
    that has the prospect of restoring your territorial integrity by
    showing those in Abkhazia and South Ossetia a Georgia where they can
    be free and their communities can flourish; where they can enjoy
    autonomy within a federal system of government, where life can be so
    much better for them than it is now."

    Commenting on that exhortation the following day, Georgian Minister
    for Reintegration Issues Temur Yakobashvili told journalists that any
    decision on a federal structure should be delayed until after the
    "de-occupation" of Georgian territory, meaning the withdrawal from
    Abkhazia and South Ossetia of the Russian troops currently stationed
    there and the two republics' re-subordination to the central Georgian
    government.
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