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TBILISI: International Conference On North Caucasus Issues

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  • TBILISI: International Conference On North Caucasus Issues

    INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON NORTH CAUCASUS ISSUES

    The Messenger, Georgia
    March 25 2010

    Some days ago an international conference was held in Tbilisi
    dedicated to the problems in the North Caucasus. The major outcome
    of the conference was that Circassian representatives asked the
    Georgian Government to recognise the Circassian genocide carried
    out by Russians in the 19th century, when they claim two million
    Circassians were exterminated in what is now the Krasnodar region
    of the Russian Federation, which until the 19th century had been a
    Circassian homeland. About 1 million Circassians were forced to leave
    Russia and emigrated to Turkey.

    One of the last battles between the Russian regular forces and
    Circassian troops took place at the site where the 2014 Sochi Winter
    Olympics are due to be held. The Circassian delegation is preparing
    an application to the Georgian Parliament asking it to recognise the
    genocide of the Circassian people. Georgian analysts and specialists
    in Caucasus issues think that discussing Circassian problems is very
    important for Georgia for a variety of reasons. The Circassians are
    a related people to the Abkhaz and are very influential in Abkhazia,
    as Circassians even participated in the military operations against
    Georgia. Current Georgian-Circassian relations can also be addressed
    within the context of the present confrontation between Georgia and
    Russia. For this reason Circassian national movement leader Patima
    Tlisova thinks that there is a quite substantial probability that
    the Georgian Parliament will recognise the Circassian genocide as
    Georgia could use this as a political tool against Russia.

    MP Nugzar Tsiklauri has stated that the Georgian Parliament will by
    all means consider the Circassian people's request but this could be a
    very long process. The situation is quite complicated. Acknowledging
    this genocide will irritate Russia, and analyst Mamuka Areshidze
    thinks that Armenia will then demand that Georgia also recognise
    the Armenian genocide. Any kind of decision should be taken only in
    Georgia's interests.

    Chairman of the Caucasus People's Confederation Zaal Kasrelishvili
    thinks it unlikely that Parliament will recognise the genocide,
    however he considers that more attention should be paid to the problems
    of the North Caucasus people. If we dig deeper into this issue we
    might discover that the Russians have committed acts of genocide
    against several North Caucasus peoples, such as the Circassians,
    Abkhaz, Chechens, Dagestanis and Muslim Ossetians, at different
    times. Several hundred thousand Chechens were killed during the two
    Chechen wars conducted by Russia against one of its regions at the
    end of the last century, and Chechen nationalists insist that this
    is another unrecognised genocide.

    There are certain issues, in particular ones involving Russia, to
    which the international community turns a blind eye. Things like
    genocide are only taken seriously when they receive wider resonance,
    as we can see from the international reactions to the Nazi holocaust
    and the documented genocides in Rwanda, Darfur, Cambodia and various
    other places. Here we may have another reason why Russia is determined
    to put itself on one side of the fence and Europe on the other.
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