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Why Independence For Abkhazia Is The Best Solution
by George Hewitt (Professor; London School Of Oriental and
African Studies)
EurAsia Critic, June 2008
Historical Background
Bagrat' III (d. 7th May 1014) was the first ruler of the
united feudal kingdom of Georgia, having inherited the 200 year-old 'Kingdom
of Abkhazia' (which encompassed not only today's Abkhazia but western
Georgia too) from his mother. In the Georgian chronicles he (and his
successors) carried the title /mepe apxazta da kartvelta/ 'King of the
Abkhazians and Kartvelians' in recognition of the role played by the
Abkhazians in creating this union. The arrival of the Mongols in the 13th
century dissolved it into smaller statelets, of which Abkhazia (under the
Chachba ruling family) was one. The political border with neighbouring
Mingrelia (under the Dadiani ruling family) was set along the River Ingur in
the 1680s. It has remained here ever since, serving today as the front line
between de facto independent Abkhazia and post-Soviet Georgia. In the north,
Abkhazian speakers traditionally occupied the coastal strip up to the River
Mzymta, where settlements belonging to their Ubykh cousins began; further
north (up to the River Kuban and in land) lived the various communities of
their other cousins, the Circassians . Since the Mzymta lies north of
Abkhazia's current border with Russia (River Psou), any Abkhazian
irredentist claims would be lodged in Moscow (not Tbilisi)!
Over the centuries the littoral attracted Genoese, Ottoman and Catholic
missionary interest, but little altered the population-distribution until
the tsars moved south, having gained a foothold in Transcaucasia with the
1783 Treaty of Georgievsk between Catherine the Great and Erek'le II, King
of the Central and Eastern Georgian Kingdoms of Kartli and K'akheti. At the
end of the Great Caucasian War (1864), all Ubykhs plus most Circassians and
Abkhazians migrated to Ottoman territory — a further outflow followed the
Russo-Turkish war of 1877-78. As of 1878, then, the Abkhazians would have
regarded the Russians as their worst nightmare. This is what the Georgians
think their attitude should still be. But history moved on...
Roots of the Problem
Georgian educationalist Iak'ob Gogebashvili argued in 1877 that the
Mingrelians were the ideal 'colonisers' for Abkhazia's denuded spaces, being
more easily acclimatisable to its yet un-drained swamp-lands, and
immigration began. Independent Menshevik Georgia (1918-21) saw both Abkhazia
and South Ossetia subjected to extreme violence to bring/keep them under
Georgian control. After the Red Army brought Transcaucasia into the
Bolshevik fold, Abkhazia's full republican status was recognised by Georgia
on 21st May 1921. However, after securing his position in the Kremlin,
Stalin (Iosep Dzhughashvili) reduced Abkhazia to the status of an autonomous
republic within his native Georgia. From 1937 to 1953 a policy of repression
(over and above that of the Great Terror) was applied in Abkhazia. Measures
included:
• forced implantation of huge numbers of Mingrelians (plus some Georgians),
radically altering the demographics;
• shift of the Abkhaz alphabet from a roman to a Georgian base;
• closure of Abkhaz language-schools;
• banning of publishing/broadcasting in Abkhaz;
• planned expulsion of the entire Abkhazian population to Siberia/Central
Asia, a fate they (though not Abkhazia's Greeks) escaped by a whisker, as it
was felt that enough had otherwise been done to mingrelianise/georgianise
them within a couple of generations.
One particularly loathsome feature was the publication of a blatant
distortion of Abkhazian history, concocted to justify any transportation, by
P’avle Ingoroq’va, who argued that today's Abkhazians arrived in
Transcaucasia only in the 17th century, displacing and taking the name of
history's 'true' Abkhazians, who were a Georgian tribe! This slander was
revived in late 1988 and is widely believed throughout Georgia, having been
taken up by several writers and scholars in the evident belief that serving
nationalism is nobler than serving the truth. This explains why so many
Georgians refer to Abkhazians as ‘Apswaa’. This is what Abkhazians call
themselves, and, at first glance, it might seem that those Georgians who
adopt it are actually showing respect for their neighbours' self-designation.
In fact, its use is an insult, implying that 'Abkhazians' equate to
Georgians, whereas ‘Apswaa’ are their usurpers and, thus, foreign
interlopers on 'Georgian' soil. Though anti-Abkhazian measures were put into
reverse after the deaths of Stalin and (Abkhazian-born Mingrelian) Lavrent'i
Beria in 1953, problems remained.
Discontent Persists
The American Sovietologist Darrell Slider has demonstrated that per capita
investment in Abkhazia remained lower than in the rest of Soviet Georgia.
Periodic demonstrations in Abkhazia in the late 50s, late 60s, and 1978
indicated the level of continuing resentment at the situation. The 1978
disturbances saw Georgian road-signs painted over. This followed the sending
by 130 intellectuals in December 1977 of a letter to the Kremlin requesting
that Abkhazia be administratively transferred from the Georgian SSR to the
Russian Federation. Whilst this might be interpreted as an early indication
of the pro-Russian bias many see as motivating Abkhazians today, the answer
to such a charge would be the same as that applying in the current crisis,
namely: what alternative did/do they have? The upshot was that the Kremlin
did not then dare to enrage the Georgian bull. The intellectuals lost their
jobs, but Georgian Party Boss, Eduard Shevardnadze, was dispatched to
assuage passions by establishing in the Abkhazian capital Sukhum (Aqw'a)
Georgia's second only university — previously, Batumi in Ach'ara had been
earmarked for this honour.
Confrontation
Mikhail Gorbachev's glasnost' the voicing of local grievances, and so the
Abkhazians restated long-held objections to subordination to Tbilisi in 'The
Abkhazian Letter', sent secretly to Moscow on 17th June 1988. The
perestrojka-reforms led to a weakening of the Kremlin's grip, especially on
the Soviet periphery, and nationalism exploded amongst various nationalities,
including the Georgians. From late 1988 the outpourings of not only leaders
of the unofficial opposition but also several journalists and scholars, who
should have known better what a dangerous genie they were letting out of the
bottle, were particularly venomous about Georgia's numerous minorities (predominantly
the Abkhazians, Azerbaijanis, South Ossetians, and Daghestanis in eastern
Georgia). When the existence of 'The Abkhazian Letter' became public
knowledge in Georgia is unclear, but its sentiments were endorsed by
representatives of all the ethnic groups living in Abkhazia at a public
meeting in Lykhny on 18th March 1989, and anti-Abkhazian feelings were aired
at the demonstration for Georgian independence that led to killings by
Soviet troops in the centre of Tbilisi on 9th April.
The establishment of Aydgylara 'Unity', the Abkhazian national forum (like
that of the parallel organisation Adæmon Nykhas in S. Ossetia) was, however,
essentially a reaction, conditioned by alarming developments in central
Georgia. The unofficial Georgian oppositionists manufactured an artificial
dispute centred around the Abkhazian State University; the Georgian sector
broke away and agitated for a rival branch of Tbilisi University to be set
up to cater for their needs. On the eve of entrance-exams to this illegal
structure, the first fatal ethnic clashes took place in Sukhum and
Ochamchira (to the south-east) on 15-16th July 1989 — there was also loss of
life at around the same time in Marneuli-Dmanisi, the Azerbaijani-populated
area of Georgia. On 17th of July, Soviet Interior Ministry troops were
introduced to keep the two (Abkhazian, Mingrelian/Georgian) communities
apart, but, even so, for some three weeks after the fighting, which evidence
amassed by the late Viktor Popkov demonstrated to have been pre-planned on
the Georgian side (see The Abkhazians: a handbook, edited by G. Hewitt,
Curzon Press, 1998), the atmosphere remained horribly tense.
War
Political games continued to be played over the next three years. Zviad
Gamsakhurdia was elected Georgia's president in 1990 and soon began his 2-year
war in S. Ossetia. Though most Georgians boycotted the referendum on
Gorbachev's proposed new Union Treaty on 17th March 1991, a majority of
Abkhazia's eligible electorate voted in favour (i.e. against secession). But
the Treaty was never signed, as Gorbachev was overthrown, and the USSR
disintegrated. Georgia thus gained independence. The West, however,
refrained from recognising the country under the unstable character heading
it. Gamsakhurdia was ousted in a coup in January 1992; civil war followed in
Mingrelia, Gamsakhurdia's native region. In March the coup-leaders shrewdly
invited Shevardnadze home from Moscow-retirement to lead his original
fiefdom. From that moment the West has committed a series of errors in
relations with Georgia which not only helped stoke the war but have inflamed
post-war crises developments.
Though civil war was still raging and Shevardnadze did not achieve electoral
legitimacy until 11th October 1992, the UK led the EU in both recognising
Georgia (within the frontiers gifted to it by Stalin) and establishing
diplomatic relations the very month of Shevardnadze's return. This was
followed by further precipitate action, as Georgia was granted membership of
the IMF, World Bank and the UN. The West, thereby, lost all chance of acting
as honest broker in ending the civil war and restraining Georgian
impetuosity in Abkhazia, as territorial integrity became the overriding
imperative, and blind eyes were turned to whatever nefarious actions were
perpetrated by the central government within its internationally recognised
borders. Shevardnadze celebrated Georgia's UN membership by unleashing war
in Abkhazia on 14th August. The only logical explanation for this disastrous
decision is that he was seeking to rally Gamsakhurdia's supporters to the 'patriotic'
(i.e. his) cause by portraying the Abkhazians as the common foe. The gamble
failed, for the Zviadists continued the fight. The Gal Mingrelians, being in
large measure descendants of Abkhazians who succumbed relatively early to
mingrelianisation, tended towards neutrality, and this is one reason why the
Abkhazians have been quite sanguine about allowing them to stay in/return to
Gal. But Abkhazia's Kartvelian population north of the Gal District,
essentially the communities implanted in the 1930s, enthusiastically
supported the invasion.
During the war the Abkhazians lost 4% of their population (and suffered the
deliberate torching of their archives in a Georgian attempt to eradicate
documentary proof of the Abkhazian presence on Abkhazian soil). The Georgian
general in charge of troops in the autumn of 1992, Gia Q'arq'arashvhili, was
filmed issuing this threat: 'I am prepared to sacrifice 100,000 Georgians to
kill all 93,000 Abkhazians, if that is what it takes to keep Georgia's
borders inviolate' . The Abkhazians in alliance with volunteers from the
Diaspora and the North Caucasus (predominantly Circassians and Chechens)
proclaimed victory on 30th September 1993, though they never regained
control of the Upper K'odor Valley, where a population of Svans has lived
since the 19th-century migrations. The majority of the circa 240,000
Kartvelians living in Abkhazia in 1989 fled before the Abkhazian forces
reached their settlements (in what was thus an act of self-cleansing) only
to be appallingly treated by the Georgian authorities, who have used them as
tools to win sympathy from the West. Peace-accords were signed in April 1994
in Moscow establishing a demilitarised zone along the Ingur to be supervised
by 3,000 Russian troops on behalf of the Commonwealth of Independent States
(CIS) — Shevardnadze had joined the CIS to help quash the final Zviadist
rebellion that threatened western Georgia following the loss of Abkhazia.
Post-war Developments
Abkhazia faced economic disaster: the theatre of fighting (Ochamchira-T'qw'archal
up to the northern outskirts of Sukhum along the R. Gumista) had roads pot-holed
by tanks, bridges blown up, mines in the undergrowth (finally cleared only
in 2007), and shelled or burned skeletons of houses/apartment-blocks (still
eerily standing); the single-track railway was inoperative; transport was in
crisis, such had been the scale of looting; the phone-system hardly worked (for
years). Terrorist-attacks were carried out by such Georgian-government
sponsored groups operating out of Mingrelia such as The Forest Brethren and
The White Legion. In 1996, at Georgian insistence, the short-lived boat-link
to Trebizond was stopped, the CIS imposed a blockade (lifted only in 2008,
as Russo-Georgian relations plunged to new depths), and Russia closed the
Psou-border to all but Russian passport-holders, though it was reopened in
2006; as old Soviet passports ran out, Abkhazians found themselves for
several years unable to travel beyond Russia, until Vladimir Putin allowed
them to acquire Russian documents from 2001. In 1998 the Georgians again
resorted to arms but were beaten back. Despite all, Abkhazia has struggled
to rebuild its economy and establish a democratic state with both regular
parliamentary and presidential elections — it promulgated a new Constitution
and declared formal independence in December 1999, rejecting any idea of
reintegration within Georgia; tourism in the main northern resorts is back
to Soviet levels, and each year there is a greater air of prosperity, though
wages are low, and certain areas (like Ochamchira) cry out for investment.
Post-war Georgia spent years in the throes of lawlessness, almost becoming a
failed state. Shevardnadze slowly dragged it from the brink, and, as the
question of transporting Caspian oil westwards came on the agenda, western
interest grew. Investment, military help, and membership of the Council of
Europe (1999) followed. Dissatisfaction with corruption and general inertia,
however, led to the Rose Revolution (November 2003), when the young
pretender, Mikheil Saak'ashvili, ousted the White Fox. After his election,
he quickly re-imposed central control on Ach'ara on the Turkish border and
boasted that S. Ossetia and Abkhazia would follow. In 2006, in contravention
of the 1994 accords, he introduced Georgian military personnel into the
Upper K'odor Valley, calling it a 'policing operation'. Abkhazian President
Sergei Bagapsh immediately suspended peace-talks, and they have not resumed.
On the eve of NATO's Bucharest meeting (April 2008), Saak'ashvili suddenly
produced a new peace-plan; previously all that had been offered to Abkhazia
was a return to the status quo ante bellum, whereas now federalism is
proposed. Whilst the proposal has achieved its goal (solely to impress
Georgia's western friends), it has come 19 years too late for it to be taken
seriously by the Abkhazians — and what of such other minorities as the
Armenians of Dzhavakheti, the Azerbaijanis of Dmanisi-Marneuli, or the S.
Ossetians?
What now?
Abkhazians do not trust the Georgians, who have only themselves to blame for
their woes in the disputed regions; they see them as openly hostile to all
their minorities, even lacking respect for the languages of their Kartvelian
kin (Mingrelians and Svans). Abkhazians are also suspicious of the West,
which ignores Georgian:
• human rights' abuses (as bravely chronicled over the years at: www.humanrights.ge);
• infringements of electoral practices, including restricting opposition-access
to the media (see various pages at www.messenger.com.ge) and intimidation of
voters and/or candidates (www.civilgeorgia.ge/eng/article.php?id=17803);
• police-brutality against anti-government demonstrators and closure of the
independent Imedi TV-channel on 7th November 2007;
• failure to implement Georgia's condition for membership of the Council of
Europe in 1999, namely to resettle within 12 years the Meskhetians, deported
by Stalin in 1944, who wish to return to Meskheti.
Abkhazians assert that they did not win a war they never sought and suffer
15 years of privations only to become irrelevant minnows in another state's
(Russia's) backwater. They (and the Armenians and Russians who constitute a
majority of the population) demand Abkhazia's de facto independence become
de jure, with secure international guarantees of non-aggression. That would
allow their economy to flourish from tourism and give them the confidence,
once the dilapidated housing-stock is rebuilt, to attract back home both
members of their own Diaspora (based in Turkey, where numbers exceed
300,000) and more of the Kartvelian refugees who fled in 1993, though it is
unclear how many of the latter would choose to return to territory outside
Georgian control. With Abkhazia independent and neutral, Russia would gain
by not having an immediate border with Georgia (inside or outside NATO).
Georgia would benefit by having its rail-link to Russia restored and being
freed from constant tension along the Ingur — Georgia did, after all, lose
the war it initiated and must accept the consequences flowing there from.
Georgia exhibits no such inclination, ascribing its travails to Russia's
imperial machinations, and relies on intrigues with the West and NATO to
solve them. Since no-one believes that NATO would go to war over Abkhazia
and S. Ossetia, the fear is that Georgia might risk a pre-emptive strike
before NATO's decision on membership. Whether this explains Saak'ashvili's
latest manoeuvrings in the K'odor Valley or whether they are just dangerous
games to increase his popularity in the run-up to the parliamentary
elections of 21st May is unclear. But Russia's increase in its peace-keepers
is to forestall any further bloodshed. If NATO takes minority-rights
seriously, it should state unequivocally that Georgian membership will be
removed from the agenda, if there is any attempt to retake Abkhazia by force.
Whatever one thinks of Russo-Georgian relations in general, the Russian
military presence in Abkhazia has preserved 14 years of peace. Western
spokesmen (particularly those conditioned by Cold War mindsets) frequently
voice concerns at Russian moves in Abkhazia, and yet the West's rigidly pro-Georgian
stance, unchanged since the first mistake of precipitate recognition in
1992, has done nothing but drive Abkhazia ever deeper into Russia's embrace.
Only one just solution beckons — full independence for Abkhazia. 'In
international law Abkhazia is a secessionist state of Georgia,' mouth the
politicians, diplomats and pro-Georgian lobbyists. True, but to satisfy the
higher demands of justice Abkhazia's legal position has to change. This is
what Georgia's real friends should be counselling it to recognise and accept
— for everybody's sake.
Endnotes
1 Abkhaz, Circassian and now extinct Ubykh form the North West Caucasian
language-family, which has no genetic link to georgian, which belongs to the
South Caucasian family along with Mingrelian, Svan and Laz.
2 the civilian head of Georgia's wartime-administration, Giorgi Khanindrava,
made a similar thereat on the pages of Le Monde Diplomatique in April 1993
Source: EurAsia Critic
Abkhazia's
Liberation and International Law
By E. K.
Adzhindzhal, Sukhum, 2007
Origins and
Evolution of the Georgian-Abkhaz Conflict
By Stephen Shenfield
Abkhazia and South Ossetia: heart of conflict,
key to solution
By George Hewitt
Georgia's Trilogy of Tragedies (1. Zviad
Gamsakhurdia, 2. Eduard Shevardnadze, 3. Mikheil Saak'ashvili

Or A Reply to David L. Phillips (pt.2) by George Hewitt
By George Hewitt, Aqw'a, Apsny, 25 August 2008
Post-war Developments
in the Georgian-Abkhazian Dispute
By George Hewitt, Parliamentary Human Rights Group June 1996
Abkhazian
Conflict: Nine Questions and answers
Andreas Andersen’s assertions and George Hewitt's responses
Abkhazia's
Liberation and International Law
By E. K.
Adzhindzhal, Sukhum, 2007
Georgian
Apologists (at home and abroad)
by George
Hewitt (Professor of Caucasian Languages, SOAS, London University)
Soviet
Abkhazia 1989, Facts and Thoughts
By Viktor A. Popkov, Russian
humanitarian, human rights activist and journalist
Some Thoughts on 'Abkhazia is not
Kosovo' by David L. Phillips (Transitions Online, 7 Feb.08)
By George Hewitt

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