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IWPR: Georgia's Armenians Want Tbilisi To Recognize "Genocide"

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  • IWPR: Georgia's Armenians Want Tbilisi To Recognize "Genocide"

    GEORGIA'S ARMENIANS WANT TBILISI TO RECOGNISE "GENOCIDE"
    Tamuna Uchidze

    Institute for War & Peace Reporting IWPR
    April 27 2010
    UK

    But analysts say it could not afford to put its relations at risk
    with Ankara.

    Georgia is unlikely to agree to an appeal by the country's Armenian
    community to officially recognise as genocide the mass killings
    conducted in the Ottoman Empire after 1915, commentators say.

    More than 20 countries have recognised the killings as genocide,
    despite furious opposition from Turkey, but experts say Georgia is
    not expected to join them, being dependant on its neighbour for much
    of its trade and access to the outside world.

    Every year on April 24, Armenians around the world mark the mass
    killings that they say began on that date in Istanbul in 1915. This
    year, three groups - The Armenian Community of Georgia, The Armenian
    Centre of Cooperation of Georgia and the Association of Armenian
    Students of Georgia - for the first time prepared an appeal to both
    parliament and President Mikhail Saakashvili.

    According to the last census, Armenians make up five per cent of
    Georgia's population, most of them being concentrated in the southern
    Samtskhe-Javakheti region.

    "This year it is 95 years since the start of the first genocide of the
    20th century - the Armenian genocide in the Ottoman Empire in 1915-23.

    The Armenians of Georgia have one desire, that the authorities
    recognised this fact, and therefore we decided to begin our process,"
    Alexander Oganov, a representative of the Armenian students' group,
    said.

    Robert Muradyan, a teacher in one of Georgia's Armenian-language
    schools, said such a step would be hugely appreciated by Armenians.

    "The genocide of ethnic Armenians has been recognised by many
    countries. If Georgia recognises it, it would be a mark of respect
    towards the Armenian nation," he said.

    However, most experts think that such a statement by the government
    would cause outrage in Turkey, which Saakashvili can ill afford,
    considering his already poor relations with northern neighbour Russia.

    "The examination of such a question would complicate relations between
    Georgia and Turkey," said Tsira Meskhishvili, chairwoman of the
    Tolerant association, in words echoed across the political spectrum.

    "This is a very complicated question which we must approach with great
    caution. Armenia is our neighbour and partner, but it is necessary
    also to study the geopolitical situation in the region," said Tamaz
    Petriashvili, who represents part of Samtskhe-Javakheti , a largely
    ethnic Armenian region, for the ruling coalition in parliament.

    "Georgia has to consider many factors, including our strategic
    relations with Turkey, which is also a neighbour and one of Georgia's
    important partners."

    The parliament deputy declined to speculate whether the chamber would
    debate the issue soon.

    "If it was that simple a question, then it would have been resolved
    by other countries as well a long time ago. We need to be cautious,
    so as to maintain stability in the region," he said.

    There is some political pressure on the local level, however. Ruben
    Karapetyan, deputy head of the local administration in Alakhtsikhe,
    which is the main town of Samtskhe-Javakheti, said Armenians would
    maintain the campaign for recognition.

    "What difference does it make when this happens? Today or tomorrow,
    this question will be on the agenda anyway. Ethnic Armenians living
    in Georgia have waited for the genocide to be recognised for a long
    time already," he said.

    But historians say that, whatever the facts of the case, which are
    disputed between Armenia and Turkey, recognition would be a step
    based on politics, not history.

    "If Turkey recognises the genocide, and Georgia goes along with it,
    that is a different thing. Otherwise, we would radically change
    our good neighbourly relations with Turkey. In such a situation,
    Georgia must not recognise the genocide and it won't happen," Nikoloz
    Akhalkatsi, a Georgian historian, said.

    His opinion seemed to meet broad consensus among political analysts,
    who said the government could not afford to put its relations at risk
    with Ankara.

    "Georgia borders both Armenia and Turkey, and does not have the right
    to harm relations with either of its neighbours. Georgian citizens
    of Armenian ethnicity should look on this question with understanding.

    They, of course, have the right to give petitions to the authorities,
    but must be prepared to receive a justified refusal," said Paata
    Zakareishvili, an analyst from the Institute for Researches of
    Nationalism and Conflicts.

    He said the protocols agreed between Turkey and Armenia, which are
    intended to normalise relations between the countries, sanctioned
    the establishment of a joint commission to study the question of
    the genocide.

    "It would be better if Georgia waited for the conclusions of this
    commission. I think that a time will come when Turkish society and
    state recognise this fact. The question is a problem for Turkish
    society, not for Armenians," he said.

    Tamuna Uchidze is a reporter from the Southern Gates newspaper.
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