comments on ‘georgia: a report’ by international alert, by george hewitt

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  • 8/9/2019 Comments on Georgia: a report by International Alert, by George Hewitt

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    sinte muoti goo, utole rek da?

    Why do you need light, if you are blind? (Mingrelian proverb)

    Comments on

    Georgia: a report by International Alert

    This is a deeply flawed (not to say totally unprofessional) and indeed dishonest

    document, a fact that should be brought to the attention of all who read it. It is flawed

    because the duty of such a commission should be to form an objective judgment on the

    basis of its background-research and its discussions with both parties as to where the truth

    actually lies among the various (counter-)claims and not merely anecdotally to repeat, as

    is often the case here, the claims themselves in the context of a one-sided running-

    commentary. It is dishonest insofar as, after largely disparaging the Abkhazian leadership

    (in terms of its academic nature, lack of administrative experience, and poor grasp of

    international law), it proceeds actually to advocate two courses of action which have

    formed the very fundamentals of Abkhazian desiderata from the beginning, namely that

    (i) Abkhazia be awarded the status of a full republic within Georgia, and (ii) Abkhazia

    enter into federal (?confederal) relations with Georgia. The 1925 constitution of

    Abkhazia, restored on 23 July 1992 (though nowhere mentioned in this document),

    effectively realised BOTH these recommendations. As the commission-members well

    know (or should know, if they bothered to read the materials I personally supplied and forwhich I am thanked at the back of this report, from which I totally dissociate myself),

    negotiations on the form of the new confederative relations were in progress on the very

    day that Shevardnadze sent in his forces. Yet readers will search in vain for any word of

    condemnation of that calculated act, as a result of which hundreds have died and continue

    to die, while the world largely ignores the suffering and certainly seeks to put no pressure

    on Shevardnadze to mend his ways. That pressure will come when visitors to Tbilisi

    make the effort to look beneath the surface-hospitality and examine the depth of racism

    that infuses this society. Only then will there be a true understanding of the nature of the

    various ethnic disputes that scar this country, any long-term resolution of which must be

    preceded by the Kartvelians restraining (it is too much to hope that it will be

    relinquished) the notion that their racial superiority gives them a right to (mis)behave

    within their internationally recognised borders at will.

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    Specific observations:

    p.1: whilst Gamsakhurdia certainlyshares some blame for the situation in Abkhazia, the

    decision to send in troops and start the killing was Shevardnadzes (Independent 24-IX-

    92), a fact totally ignored by IA. On what precise evidence does the commission agree

    that Russians have encouraged the Abkhazian leaders to make uncompromising

    demands, and who exactly are these Russians? President Ardzinbas first name is

    Vladislav.

    p.3: NO political solution to the problem of S. Ossetia has been found. The two Ossetias

    remain determined to unite, and my sources report that fighting is likely soon to resume

    there too. To anyone familiar with the situation in Georgia (especially Abkhazia) there is

    no irony whatsoever that this major minoritys self-assertion should be causing so much

    trouble, and for all their disingenuous surprise the Kartvelians (especially Shevardnadze)

    knew full well that this would be the case.

    p.4: of course, ancient history cannot resolve todays conflicts, but it is essential to know

    local history in order to understand todays tragedy. Clearly the commission-members

    feel they have a superior grasp of historical detail when they patronisingly dismiss the

    claims of both sides -- both sides cannot be right, and so the commission should reveal

    the basis why they are inclined to believe what they do. Ubykhs and Abazin(ian)s are

    NOT Circassian sub-groups (if indeed such is the claim); they are distinct peoples related

    both to the Abkhazians and to the Circassians. In the XIXth century the Ubykhs lived ON

    THEIR OWN TERRITORY, around todays Sochi; the Abazinians, who speak a dialect

    of Abkhaz, had all left todays Abkhazia for the Northern Caucasus before the XIXth

    century; the Circassians lived to the north of the Ubykhs and in the NW Caucasus ON

    THEIR OWN TERRITORY; and so, who are these travellers who talk of Ubykhs &

    Abazinians (& possibly Circassians) in Abkhazia? Even if true, what conclusion does the

    commission think we should draw from these reports?! If the Abkhaz coast was

    considered by the Russians as traditionally under Georgian suzerainty, why was

    Abkhazia (capital Sukhum) absorbed separately from Mingrelia (capital Zugdidi) or even

    (truly Georgian) Imereti (whose capital is Kutaisi), and why were her rulers granted a

    charter by Tsar Aleksandr promising that they would rule in perpetuity over the

    Abkhazian lands (albeit under Russian protection)? If the commission are reluctant to

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    accept as valid any information from a Russian source, let us quote from the valuable

    corpus left to us by the German traveller Johannes Gldenstdt in his Peregrinatio

    Georgica from the end of the XVIIIth century; he is quite unequivocal in describing the

    boundaries of Georgia: Dadurch grnzt es [Georgien] in Norden von O. in W. mit

    Lesgien oder Lesgistan, Kistetien, Oetien, Basiania undAbchasia....in NW. liegt ihm

    [Mingrelia] der mingrelische Distrikt Odischi, (der sich lngst dem schwarzen Meere an

    dem westl. Fusse des Gebrges bis zum Enguri erstre[c]kt, durch den es von Abchaseti

    geschieden) gegen Swaneti... How convenient that Beria-Mgeladze-Charkviani (not one

    of whom is mentioned in this report) can be absolved by fiat of IA from their role in

    deliberately disrupting the present demography of Abkhazia by the explanation that it

    arose through economic development! However, it is a relief to see that IA does

    acknowledge Abkhazia to be Abkhazian land. Why does the commission suppose

    Abkhazian intellectuals feared their language would succumb specifically to Georgian? If

    its a question of a developed and dynamic culture always assimilating the cultural

    minnow, why should these intellectuals have expected any happier fate from pitting

    Abkhaz against Russian? Cannot IA recognise that there might just conceivably be a

    more compelling motive for wanting to distance Georgian influence from the region?

    Had Georgian racism relented under Shevardnadzes illegitimate State Council (March-

    October 1992), there might be some justification to the statement that the present

    Abkhaz case...predates the collapse of the USSR; there was in fact no difference

    whatsoever in the attitude to the Abkhazians through Soviet 1988-91, Zviadist 1991-1992

    & Eduardian 1992, which is why it is totally erroneous to seek explanations (?excuses for

    the present regime) only in Soviet times.

    p.5: see D. SliderCentral Asian Survey (1985) for the facts of economic discrimination

    directed from Tbilisi. Abkhazians dont use Georgian for the simple reason that in the

    main they dont know it; the fact that Abkhaz is the language of tuition in Abkhaz

    schools only to grade 5 follows directly from it being one of the Soviet Young Written

    Languages -- can IA name any other YWL that is used for more than 4 grades? The

    largest sector of Sukhums university was always (1979-89) Georgian, where Georgian

    was freely used. The remark about Georgians readily using English, whilst Abkhazians

    have to resort to Russian is cheap in its imputation and unworthy of this commissions

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    undertaking.

    p.6: In response to a question from a BBC correspondent in Moscow on 6 Jan Achba

    emphasised that Abkhazia had not adopted a single resolution or legal act to the effect

    that Abkhazia secedes from the Republic of Georgia. The Abkhazian leadership is ready

    to negotiate the legal status of the Republic of Abkhazia within Georgia. However, the

    policy of the Georgian leaders and the war against the people of Abkhazia may result in

    a different course being adopted(Fax 7 Jan 1993). If the commission can lay such store

    on the individual pronouncements of one Abkhazian, would they please provide us with a

    critique of all the contradictory statements made by Shevardnadze about Abkhazia since

    14 Aug 1992? In any case, I am sure the Abkhazians themselves will explain the true

    value of Achbas so-called interview in Den. The Abkhazian leadership may be

    academics without a training in economics (many may judge this to be a distinct

    advantage, of course!), but, if you take the trouble to compare their leadership of

    Abkhazia with the persistently provocative behaviour of the various leaders in Tbilisi

    since 1989 (yes, including the present one with his willingness to resort to the

    kalashnikov), I maintain that the wisdom is entirely on the Abkhazian side (even if one

    would not necessarily agree with every single initiative taken). Ardzinba certainly gives

    more weight to the international principle of self-determination than he does to the

    inviolability of borders; since both these (somewhat contradictory) principles exist in

    international law, he might reasonably ask: If the law is an ass, what pray is international

    law?

    p.7: it is precisely because of Abkhazias rich potential that the Kartvelians are so

    strenuous in laying claim to it and unwilling to countenance it being controlled by anyone

    else! The commission presumes too much when charging the Abkhazian leadership with

    ignoring an economic bonanza for its peoples --for some years the Abkhazians have been

    cultivating ties with Turkish businessmen (usually of Abkhazian descent) with the

    specific purpose of developing the regions economy in terms of the inward flow of hard

    currency, and when I was in the office of the University Rector in July, he proudly

    announced that Abkhazia had just received its first dollar-income from port-duties! Dont

    the commission recognise that, when your peoples very physical survival is in danger, it

    might seem something of a luxury to sit back and debate economic issues with visiting

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    Westerners who can only spare you 48 hours of their time? It is probably as

    impermissible to label the Circassians (sc. within the Caucasus) as muslims as it is to use

    this label for the Abkhazians (thankfully recognised by IA). Of course no Abkhazian

    would claim his language to be Turkic -- it isnt, so why waste time stating the obvious?

    p.8: if it was not the aim of the Kartvelians to provoke open warfare and yet war resulted

    from their forces entering Abkhazia, why have they not been pulled out long ago in order

    to restore the peace the leaders in Tbilisi evidently so sincerely desire? Notice that no

    mention is made of freeing kidnapped ministers as motive for this military adventure, and

    compare this with what Shevardnadze was saying at the time. The railroad was in no

    danger in Abkhazia -- it was Zviadist Mingrelians (a people nowhere mentioned in this

    report) who were blowing up the line (& kidnapping ministers) IN MINGRELIA. How

    comforting to learn that Georgian soldiers are brave and patriotic! -- this remark is

    TOTALLY irrelevant and by itself is sufficient to point to the tendentious nature of this

    document. When your aim is merely to disrupt life, kill as many of your ethnic foes as

    possible in the hope that theyll leave their territory so that it can be yours, do you really

    need a strategy? I am so pleased to hear that the commission (the guest) does not seek to

    berate or chastise Chairman Shevardnadze (the host) -- that would never do, would it?!

    The October elections demonstrate exactly what all Soviet elections demonstrated -- if

    you have one candidate, he will win... In looking for an improvement in Kartvelian

    military organisation, is the commission suggesting that we can look forward to more

    efficient slaughter among Georgias ethnic minorities as a result?

    p.10: the reporting by the Georgian mass-media of the conflicts with Abkhazians,

    Azerbaydzhanis (in S. Georgia in 1989) and S. Ossetians has been nothing but

    exaggerated, inflammatory, unbalanced, partisan, and inaccurate since 1989! I have to

    say that I have not found this on the Abkhazian side (and I think I have probably

    readlistened to more than the commission-members, particularly from the Georgian-

    language media). What on earth are these arbitrary and contentious historical claims and

    allegations of Georgian brutality? Since IA is unable to confirm any case of mass-

    extermination of Kartvelians in Gagra (as opposed to the UNPO mission, which clearly

    denies that any took place), why raise the spectre that it might be true by mentioning it?

    p.11: does the commission seriously believe that a people who are 18% on their own

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    territory would be so foolish as even to contemplate the ethnic cleansing of non-

    Abkhazians from Abkhazia? Again, the mere repetition of these absurdities lends them an

    auror of reality and gives comfort to the Kartvelian side, which is irresponsible, though

    evidently an aim of the report. In contradistinction to the widespread Kartvelian cries of

    Georgia for the Georgians! from the late 80s, I ask the commission to name me one

    source (let alone one political party) that has ever advocated a policy of Abkhazia for the

    Abkhazians.

    p.12: though no specific referendum has been possible in Abkhazia, the overall majority

    from the total electorate in Abkhazia on 17 March 1991 in favour of staying within

    Gorbache/vs new Union rather than join (a racist) Georgia cannot be ignored and should

    remind observers that the Abkhazians have been working with all the non-Kartvelian

    nationalities of Abkhazia in pursuance of their aims since 1989 -- would this war have

    gone on so long if it was a simple case of 18% vs 82% of the population of the region?!

    The fact of the Kartvelian vs The Rest split is particularly well delineated in the UNPO

    report. I wonder where this Abkhazian majority is that favours inclusion (sc. other than of

    a confederative nature) within Georgia -- it exists, like much else, solely in Georgian

    propaganda.

    p.13: to suppose that Adzharia, inhabited by purely ethnic Georgians who happen to be

    largely muslim, has at least as much potential as Abkhazia to become a locus of

    contentiousness betrays total ignorance of the realities of Georgia. The only reason why

    trouble ever threatened during Gamsakhurdias time was his stupid suggestion that the

    muslim Adzharians should be weaned off islam to rejoin the christian Georgian fold; his

    notion of abolishing local autonomy also created resistance from some with local

    privileges.

    p.14: to adopt this reports penchant for irrelevant and tendentious asides for a moment,

    some might suppose the association of the words sincere commitment with the name of

    Shevardnadze was a horrendous oxymoron! Suggesting that the Abkhazian leaders would

    be wise to take account of the (surely soon to crumble) international reputation of

    Shevardnadze sounds awfully like a threat. What exacerbation of the Abkhazian problem

    could be worse than resorting to the tank, and whose decision was that?! The commission

    seems to forget that Shevardnadze returned to Georgia before anyone resorted to armed

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    conflict and the he was the one who sent in the troops. Note also that UNPOs president,

    Dr. van Walt, after visiting Abkhazia at the request of Ardzinba, sent letters to both

    Ardzinba and Shevardnadze on 14 July 1992 offering mediation and inviting them to

    negotiations in The Hague. Georgias position is extremely weak, with 30% of the

    population being non-Kartvelian and the whole country riven with splits from the top

    down; of the 4 million Kartvelians maybe 1 million Mingrelians could conceivably cause

    severe problems -- not unreasonably they rather object to being slaughtered left-right-

    and-centre by Ioselianis Mkhedrioni! If the countrys legal & diplomatic position

    remains strong, this is a matter for the international community (not the internal

    population), and it is precisely that community whose overhasty recognition of one mans

    smile (in my long-held & oft repeated opinion) bears much of the responsibility for the

    present bloodshed, since it surely gave the hotheads in Tbilisi grounds for supposing that

    they could do as they wished, as indeed they are. There is no doubt at all that the non-

    elite Abkhazians will follow their leaders until this issue is finally settled -- to suppose

    otherwise is Kartvelian inspired wishful thinking. Which Russian extremists are the

    Abkhazians accused of following?

    p.15: the impression is given that Georgia was a united country until the tsars came along

    and divided it; this is nonsense -- there was no single Georgian state from the appearance

    of the Mongols in the XIIIth century until the Mensheviks seized power (as well as

    Abkhazia!) after the Revolution. And so the commission mind-bogglingly advocates as

    its own part-solution the wholly Abkhazian position of (con)federation based on

    negotiation... It is not the Abkhazians who could best serve their peoples interests by

    examining this possibility, it is the Kartvelians to whom this advice is to be addressed,

    with an additional severe condemnation for starting a war to sabotage those very

    negotiations and frustrate the (con)federative solution... Withdrawal of Kartvelian troops

    to the Ingur should have been specified, as in the UNPO document.

    p.17: who are these Russian citizens causing trouble in Abkhazia? If reference is to the

    North Caucasian Confederation members, their intention is not to remain Russian citizens

    much longer themselves!

    There is no mention here of the North Caucasian Confederation in connection with its

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    crucial role in the affairs of Abkhazia -- it only merits a mention in connection with

    Russias involvement in the Caucasus. Whilst it may be convenient for Western

    commentators to forget (or avoid having to learn) that Abkhazia represents the south-

    westernmost reaches of a territory inhabited by North Caucasians until the great

    expulsions of 1864, the North Caucasians are not going to forget the dangers threatening

    their Abkhazian kin from a re-emergent, post-Soviet, Georgian chauvinism. This fact

    cannot be ignored in discussions of the Abkhazo-Kartvelian conflict.

    The authors of Georgia on the path to democracy... (stress added) might like to consider

    the implications of the article appended to these comments, which I have translated from

    Georgian for their benefit.

    In an equally lamentable (if journalistic) paean to Shevardnadze put out by BBC 2 on 8

    Dec 1992, American Ambassador to Georgia, Kent Brown, made the following comment:

    I would put my money on Mr Shevardnadze. I think no matter where he was or in what

    position, I would put my money on him, because I respect him greatly just as a human

    being and as a strategic thinker. I would suggest that any diplomat who holds (let alone

    publicly expresses) such adulatory views about any contemporary politician is unfit to

    hold an ambassadorial posting. In like vein, part of, if not the entire, membership of IAs

    commission to Georgia should have been disbarred from inclusion by virtue of their pre-

    disposed position, redolent throughout this sorry document.

    Fw`umfhf f7fqfhf vfhbjeg> f,pbf fehf [mfy0jegTo do damage is easy,to do good is difficult (Abkhazian proverb).