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TBILISI: Georgian Parliament May Recognise Circassian "Genocide"

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  • TBILISI: Georgian Parliament May Recognise Circassian "Genocide"

    GEORGIAN PARLIAMENT MAY RECOGNISE CIRCASSIAN "GENOCIDE"

    Georgian Times
    http://www.geotimes.ge/index.php?m=home& newsid=21038
    March 29 2010
    Georgia

    The Georgian Parliament will be asked to recognise the genocide
    of the Circassian ('Cherkess') people committed by Russia in the
    19th century. A document to this effect was adopted at a conference
    held by the Jamestown Foundation in Tbilisi on March 21 and entitled
    "Continuing Crime: Circassians and the Peoples of the North Caucasus
    Past and Future."

    The alleged Circassian genocide ostensibly happened during the
    Russo-Circassian War, conducted in Circassia (present day Russia's
    Krasnodar Krai, republics of Adygea and Karachay-Cherkessia),
    the northwestern part of the Caucasus. The war ended in 1864 with
    annexation of these lands to the Russian Empire. During the 1860s much
    of the Circassian population was expelled from their lands. Historians
    site figures as large as 500,000 and greater. A large fraction of
    them died in transit.This expulsion and other actions of the Russian
    military has given rise to a movement for international recognition
    of the alleged genocide.

    Nugzar Tsiklauri, Chairman of the Georgian Parliament's Committee on
    Relations with the Diaspora, said that the document contains request
    for the Parliament of Georgia to recognise the genocide of the
    Circassian people by the Russian Empire, though it is not currently
    recognised by any state. It is difficult at this point to talk about
    whether MPs will support the appeal, however, he said.

    Tsiklauri also said that Moscow might be irritated by this appeal
    but it can also get upset over anything, including even the March 20
    rugby match, which resulted in a Georgian victory.

    The appeal will be officially delivered to the legislature at the end
    of May. The Georgian Parliament is likely to recognize the genocide
    because it can use the issue as a political weapon against Russia, said
    journalist Fatima Tlisova, one of the leaders of the Circassian lobby.

    Additionally, the move may elevate Georgia's standing in the region.

    "The fact that the Circassians have decided to have close relations
    with the Georgian Parliament opens up a new perspective for us,"
    Tsiklauri said. "Georgia can now become the regional centre which will
    influence the processes developing in the North and South Caucasus,"

    The appeal on the part of Circassians is not surprising and relies
    on many similar precedents. "Such requests are numerous worldwide,"
    said Mamuka Areshidze, Director of the Caucasus Institute of Strategic
    Studies. "Armenia's activity has provoked responses and the Parliaments
    of France, Sweden and America have adopted resolutions about the
    genocide of Armenians. Why is it not possible to do the same for the
    Circassian people?"

    Areshidze said that it will be salutary if Georgia stretches out a
    hand to the Circassian people and attempts to discuss their tragedy
    at a high political level. He also said that this will be unpleasant
    for Russia and "no one in Moscow will be surprised."

    However he said that official Tbilisi must not be led by emotion when
    discussing this issue. In 1992-1993 Circassian people fought against
    Georgians with the Russians and the Abkhaz separatists. During the
    August war in 2008 Circassians also held support actions in favour
    of Russia in front of Georgian Embassies worldwide.

    Areshidze said that the Circassians thought that by showing this
    support they would persuade Russia to agree to recognise the genocide
    and not hold the Olympics in Sochi. However, "they did not gain
    anything from these rallies," the expert said.

    Iad Iugar, head of the Circassian Cultural Institute of New York, said
    during the conference that currently the aims of Circassian movement
    are to form their own State, to obtain recognition of the genocide and
    prevent the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics taking place. The participants
    of the conference said that the Olympic Charter directly prohibits
    holding the Olympics in places where large numbers of people have been
    killed and accordingly it is unacceptable to hold the games in Sochi.

    According to Areshidze those Circassians attending the conference
    in Tbilisi favoured Abkhazia's independence from Georgia. "I think
    the reason for this is that we have not had any contact with the
    Circassian nation for a long time and no steps have been made towards
    the North Caucasus peoples," he said. "In this period Russia has been
    conducting an information war against Georgia."

    Circassians' support for Abkhazia notwithstanding, the de-facto
    independent republic have not recognized the fact of genocide even
    though Abkhazians are a kindred people of the Circassians.

    Representatives of Circassian diasporas from different countries,
    except Turkey, attended the conference. The Circassian diaspora in
    Turkey refrained from attending the conference because it was afraid
    of spoiling relations with Russia, said Glen Howard, President of
    the Jamestown Foundation and one of its organisers.
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