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Georgia's Armenian Minority Looks Ahead To Local Elections

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  • Georgia's Armenian Minority Looks Ahead To Local Elections

    GEORGIA'S ARMENIAN MINORITY LOOKS AHEAD TO LOCAL ELECTIONS

    Georgiandaily
    http://georgiandaily.com/ index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id= 17995&Itemid=133
    March 31 2010
    Georgia

    The NGO Javakhk, one of several that seek to represent the interests
    of the prominently Armenian population of the southern Georgian region
    of Javakheti, convened a congress in the regional center, Akhalkalaki,
    on March 27 to discuss priorities and demands in the run-up to the
    Georgian local government elections scheduled for May 30, Caucasus
    Press reported on March 30.

    The 200 participants (of an estimated regional Armenian population
    of around 160,000) adopted a statement reiterating long-standing
    grievances that they attribute to the allegedly discriminatory
    policies of the Georgian central government. They include harassment;
    restrictions on the use of the Armenian language; and disputes over
    historic church buildings to which both the Georgian Orthodox Church
    and the Armenian Apostolic Church lay claim.

    The participants explicitly appealed to the Georgian authorities not to
    create obstacles to candidates representing the region's Armenian NGOs
    who seek to register as candidates in the upcoming local elections,
    and also to guarantee that the vote will be free and fair.

    The appeal was by no means the first address to the Georgian leadership
    in recent years. Shortly after the August 2008 Georgian-Russian war,
    the Council of Armenian NGOs of Samtskhe-Javakheti released a statement
    arguing that the only ay to restore Georgia's territorial integrity and
    allay ethnic tensions is to transform the country into a federal state.

    The council proposed that Samtskhe-Javakheti be granted "broad
    self-government" within that federal framework, including the right
    to free elections for all local government bodies and jurisdiction
    over culture, education, crime prevention, and environmental and
    socioeconomic issues. The region would also be represented within
    the legislative, executive, and judicial branches of government at
    the national level. And, crucially, Armenian would be designated a
    regional official language, alongside Georgian.

    Such measures to protect the rights of national minorities are, the
    NGOs pointed out, one of the necessary preconditions for Georgia's
    successful integration into Euro-Atlantic structures.

    The Georgian authorities have until very recently made little effort
    to redress the Javakheti Armenians' grievances, possibly counting on
    the fact that the Republic of Armenia leadership is so dependent on
    maintaining cordial relations with Georgia for overland communication
    with the outside world that it cannot risk campaigning too aggressively
    on behalf of its hapless co-ethnics.

    And some initiatives intended to resolve problems have served only
    to compound them. An example is Georgia's point-blank rejection of an
    Armenian government offer to provide Armenian-language textbooks for
    schools in Javakheti. Georgian Ambassador to Yerevan Grigol Tabatadze
    told journalists earlier this month that only Georgian textbooks
    approved by the Georgian Ministry of Education can be translated into
    Armenian, published in Armenia, and then transported to Javakheti for
    use in the region's 144 Armenian schools, Caucasus Press reported on
    March 11.
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