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The Georgian-Abkhazian Conflict: In Search of Ways out
by Viacheslav A. Chirikba
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"The principle of the free self-determination of
nations [is one] upon which all the modern world insists (...) It is the
principle of justice to all peoples and nationalities, and their right
to live on equal terms of liberty and safety with one another, whether
they be strong or weak".
Woodrow Wilson |
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The collapse of the Soviet Union, the end of the Cold War and the
appearance on the map of Europe of dozens of new states marked a transition
in world history: from a bipolar world, dominated by two superpowers, to a
completely new situation characterized by a substantial increase in the
importance of internal and regional issues, including regional conflicts. In
Western Europe, the fast-growing integration of national structures into a
pan-European megastructure is leading to the erosion of classical notions of
the state, including such sacred cows as state borders and state sovereignty.
But old notions, which reflect the preceding Cold War era or even more
archaic periods of history, still dominate major international organizations,
the United Nations and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe included. Arguably, any true reform of the United Nations, now much
spoken about, should not be confined to fighting its bureaucracy and
ineffectiveness, but - even more importantly - should get this major
international organization to face the burning regional issues that are now
to the fore in the making of the world's history. The UN should defend not
only the interests of recognized governments, but also those of the peoples
ruled, and sometimes oppressed, by these governments - it should become more
an organization for peoples than for nations. Ethnic minorities should have
their own place in UN structures, so that their voices are heard when
important decisions or resolutions that directly affect their interests are
being adopted. It is only because of the UN and OSCE's insensitivity to the
plight of ethnic minorities that many of these see no other way out than to
resort to violence in order to assert their rights and defend their
interests.
It could be argued that a more principled approach by the United Nations
to the conflict situations emerging in different parts of the world could,
in many cases, help to overcome any deepening of these crises. Taking
Georgia and Abkhazia as an example, one can ask whether it was normal that a
country like the newly born Republic of Georgia should have been admitted to
the UN in conditions of unresolved ethnic conflicts and civil war, simply
because an allegedly pro-democracy leader came to rule the country after the
democratically elected president had been deposed by a military coup. Was it
normal that when in August 1992 this same leader, a short time after Georgia
was granted UN membership, started a major military campaign against the
small Abkhazian republic that was seeking more autonomy; when there were
numerous reports of bloodshed and abuses of basic human rights; when, in a
televised address, the commander of the Georgian forces in Abkhazia
explicitly threatened the entire Abkhazian population with genocide;[1]
when the monuments to Abkhazian culture were being desecrated and the
National Archives and scientific establishments of Abkhazia were being burnt
to ashes; when there were numerous appeals to the United Nations by the
Abkhaz authorities and different international organizations and NGOs to
intervene and help to stop violence - that, despite all this, there was no
response whatsoever from the United Nations? But when Georgia began to lose
ground in Abkhazia and, sensing imminent defeat, appealed to the United
Nations to help preserve its "territorial integrity", it immediately got a
positive reaction. Is it normal that the United Nations resolutions should
invariably use pejorative language towards Abkhazians and their elected
authorities and, paradoxically, should treat Abkhazia as a culprit and the
Tbilisi government, which started and waged the war, as a victim? And such
an attitude is characteristic not only of UN. In one of its resolutions, the
European Parliament called the Abkhazian Government a "bandit-terrorist
movement".[2]
This and many other instances clearly demonstrate the exclusively pro-government
- whatever the government - attitude of major international structures, and
their utter insensitivity to the voices of anyone other than recognized
governments. It is this (in my view) outdated approach that needs to be
reformed.
Self-determination
All the UN Security Council resolutions on Georgia/Abkhazia - notorious
for their one-sided pro-Georgian stance and harsh language towards Abkhazia
- while ritualistically repeating the demand for respect for the territorial
integrity and sovereignty of the Republic of Georgia, leave out one very
important element. Not a single word in these resolutions addresses the
concerns of the Abkhazian side of the conflict or the legitimate and
inalienable right of the Abkhazian people to self-determination.
The right to self-determination remains a burning issue for the
international community, and one which the United Nations and OSCE are
failing - or rather, are unwilling - to address properly. Though this
principle is enshrined in the United Nations Charter (in Article 1),
priority is in fact given to the concurring principle of territorial
integrity and the inviolability of state borders. The history of the last
decade, with the sudden and unexpected disintegration of the Soviet Union,
Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia, as well as the separation of Eritrea from
Ethiopia, has showed that today this principle has only relative validity,
and should be applied more to forced changes of the borders of one state by
another state or states than to the emergence of two or more new states from
an older one.
A number of important points emerge from this. First, whatever the
apocalyptic predictions may be, the separation of part of a state does not
necessarily lead to the annihilation of that state. It should be noted that
despite the de facto separation of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, populated by
distinctly non-Georgian and independently minded nations, Georgia managed to
acquire its much-needed internal coherence and enjoy the first years of a
dynamic and relatively peaceful development. Secondly, it is sometimes more
expedient to release part of a country and let it form an autonomy (as in
the case of Gagauzia in Moldova), or even a separate state, than to engage
in a bloody, costly and inhuman war trying to hold on at any cost to the
independence-seeking territory, which is usually populated by a non-related
people. Some analysts rightly call this latter phenomenon "aggressive
integrationalism", a description that fully applies to such a state as
Georgia and to some other multi-ethnic states which, in the course of their
history, incorporated or annexed territories and their indigenous
populations. As noted by Gidon Gotlieb in his book Nation Against State, "The
denial of statehood to the peoples who have engaged in a long and painful
struggle or who continue to resist alien rule is increasingly difficult to
justify even as the imperative of limiting the number of new states is
becoming more pressing".[3]
While informally discussing these problems with high-ranking UN officials,
the Abkhazian delegation in Geneva was reminded that much bloodshed in world
history had been caused by the striving for self-determination. At least two
contrary arguments can be put forward against this claim, typical of the
current UN attitude towards the issue of self-determination.
First, the overwhelming majority of the present UN member states came
into existence precisely through asserting their right to self-determination,
often by way of military struggle, the best-known example being the United
States of America. In more recent times, the fifteen newly recognized states
of the former Soviet Union and the former union republics of Yugoslavia, as
well as Slovakia and Eritrea, emerged as independent states and were
recognized by the international community through realizing their right to
self-determination, by separating from other states and by changing
internationally recognized borders. Incidentally, most of these examples
show that, as such, the realization of the right to self-determination does
not necessarily lead to violence and bloodshed, and that the "divorce" can
be arranged in a peaceful and civilized manner.
Second, in justifying military action by the need to preserve a country's
territorial integrity, aggressive integrationalism can lead to no less
violence and bloodshed than is usually ascribed to the striving for self-determination.
Examples of this abound, but the closest to my theme are the bloody wars
waged by Georgia against South Ossetia and Abkhazia and by Russia against
Chechnya.
In discussing the different forms of self-determination, I would like to
put special emphasis on the cases where the competing principles of
territorial integrity and the right to self-determination can - though this
may sound paradoxical - coexist peacefully. This can happen when a distinct
territory is content to limit its claims to internal self-determination,
which means the creation of a smaller state that maintains its internal
sovereignty, or internal independence, without breaking away from the bigger
state within whose borders it is confined. And this is exactly the case of
Abkhazia and Georgia. One could discuss at length how to name such a complex
state: a confederation, a loose federation, or associated territories.
Whatever the name, what is really important here is that peace is being
preserved between the different ethnic components of a bigger state, that
the borders are not violated, and the population of all parts of the
formerly unitary state can fully enjoy the privilege of peace.
Similar federalization processes are taking place in our day in parallel
with the more visible integration of Europe. We see the federalization of
Belgium and the creation of separate Flemish and Wallonian parliaments, we
observe the process of the devolution of power in Great Britain and the
setting up of Scottish and Welsh parliaments, as well as the campaign for
federalization in Italy. Contrary to fears that such measures might
undermine a country's stability, one can argue that the reverse may be true:
they can actually lead to a strengthening of the country in question, as
they allow it to avert the danger of a destructive explosion caused by the
long-suppressed dissatisfaction of ethnic minorities or distinct territories.
Devolution of central power, shared responsibility, shared sovereignty,
internal self-determination, internal sovereignty, internal self-government
by smaller nations within bigger states - all these issues, when properly
addressed, present a promising perspective for many countries that have, for
decades, been vainly fighting the spectre of "separatism" at a cost of huge
financial, military and human resources. Such solutions can, arguably, serve
not as a destabilizing, but, on the contrary, as a stabilizing factor for
the state in question, as they allow it to achieve a vitally important
internal coherence between its ethnically heterogeneous components.
The Validity of Abkhazian Claims to Statehood
Before describing the situation with the Georgian-Abkhazian peace process,
I would like to say a few words about Abkhazians and their country simply in
order to make it clear that the Abkhazian people have legitimate grounds for
their claims to statehood and sovereignty. Abkhazians speak a language
unrelated to Georgian. They have their own distinct culture and history.
Abkhazians have never been, have never regarded themselves, and have never
been regarded by Georgians or, for that matter, by any other people, as part
of the Georgian nation. Apart from short intervals, they have always enjoyed
independent statehood or very high levels of political autonomy.
The Abkhazians living in Abkhazia are predominantly (Orthodox) Christians
(some 60%) or Sunni Moslem (some 40%).[4]
The majority of Moslem Abkhazians were deported by the Russian Tsarist
administration to the Ottoman Empire in the second half of the 19th century
as a punishment for their fierce resistance to the Russian occupation and
colonization of Abkhazia.[5]
This explains, on the one hand, the existence of quite a sizeable Abkhazian
diaspora in Turkey and some Middle Eastern countries[6]
and, on the other, the fact that Abkhazians now represent only a minority in
their own homeland.[7]
Contrary to the claim that Abkhazia has always been a part of Georgia,
the real historical situation was quite different, because from the 13th
century until 1918 Georgia as a single state simply did not exist. In the
8th century, Abkhazians created the Abkhazian Kingdom, which united in the
10th century with several Georgian kingdoms to form a united Abkhazian-Georgian
Kingdom. In the 13th century this united kingdom was destroyed by the Mongol
invasion, and from that time up until 1810 Abkhazia was always an
independent principality, while Georgia disintegrated into a number of
different principalities and "kingdoms", which in the 19th century were
incorporated, one after another, into the Russian Empire. In 1810 the
Abkhazian Principality, independently of Georgian lands, joined Russia. Even
within Russia, the Abkhazian Principality under the Princes Chachba managed
to maintain its political autonomy until 1864, at a time when all Georgian
lands were reduced to mere provinces of the Russian Empire.
One often hears that autonomous status was granted to Abkhazia by the
Bolsheviks, ostensibly in a plot to undermine Georgia's sovereignty. Again,
the real situation was quite different. After the Russian Revolution of
1917, Abkhazia remained independent from Georgia. On 8 November 1917 the
Congress of the Abkhazian People formed the Abkhazian parliament (the "Abkhazian
People's Council"), which adopted a "Declaration" and "Constitution". On 11
May 1918, the Batum Peace Conference proclaimed the Mountainous Republic,
which included the whole of the North Caucasus and Abkhazia. That same year,
Abkhazia was occupied by the troops of neighbouring Georgia, who declared
Abkhazia a part of Georgia and imprisoned members of the Abkhazian
parliament, leading to protests from the command of the allied (British)
forces in Transcaucasia and the Russian White Army. In 1921, Abkhazia and
Georgia became Sovietized. On 31 March 1921, an independent Soviet Republic
of Abkhazia was proclaimed. On 21 May 1921, the Georgian Bolshevik
government officially recognized the independence of Abkhazia. But the same
year, under pressure from Stalin and other influential Georgian Bolsheviks,
Abkhazia was forced to conclude a union (i.e., confederative) treaty with
Georgia. Abkhazia still remained a full union republic until 1931, when its
status was downgraded, under Stalin's orders, from that of Union Republic to
that of an Autonomous Republic within Georgia. This act of incorporation of
Abkhazia into Georgia was conducted without the approval and against the
will of the Abkhazian people and caused mass protests in Abkhazia. Thus the
creation of the Abkhazian Autonomous Republic within Georgia was not the
result of the granting by the Bolsheviks of autonomous status to one of the
republic's minorities, as it is often alleged, but was rather the forced
convergence of two neighbouring states by the incorporation of one of them,
Abkhazia, into the other, Georgia.
Another typical misunderstanding is that, by adopting certain
constitutional acts in 1990-1992, the Abkhazian Republic proclaimed its
independence from Georgia. In fact, Abkhazia has never officially declared
its separation from Georgia. All acts undertaken by Abkhazia, beginning in
1990, were designed to protect its autonomous political status, deemed
necessary in view of the numerous statements made by leading Georgian
politicians that they doubted the legal character of Georgia's autonomies
and even threatened to abolish all of them and transform Georgia into a
unitary state.
The Act of State Sovereignty, adopted by the Abkhazian Parliament in
1990, was to protect the Republic's federal status from being ignored or
eliminated by the Tbilisi government. Abkhazia adopted this act following
analogous acts adopted by all the other former autonomous republics of the
Soviet Union, and in none of these other cases did this mean the separation
of their territory from that of the metropolis.
By reverting in 1992 to the Constitution of Abkhazian Republic of 1925,
in which relations between Abkhazia and Georgia were based on a special
Treaty of Union, Abkhazia was attempting to overcome a constitutional vacuum
in its relations with Georgia after the abolition by the Georgian Military
Council of all constitutional acts adopted in Georgia during Soviet times,
and after its return to the Constitution of the Georgian Democratic Republic
of 1921, in which the autonomous status of Abkhazia was not defined. By
adopting its new constitution in 1994, Abkhazia broke off its last remaining
ties with the old Communist regime, and declared Abkhazia a sovereign
democratic state. This constitution did not specify the form its relations
with Georgia should take, as these were to be defined through political
talks with Georgia. Nor were the status of Abkhazia or its relations with
Georgia specified in the new Georgian constitution.
The Georgian War Against Abkhazia (1992-1993)
In 1991 the Soviet Union disintegrated. In May 1991, the one who became
the first president of an independent Georgia was the ardent nationalist
Zviad Gamsakhurdia, who actually pursued the policy of "Georgia for the
Georgians". A year later, Gamsakhurdia was deposed as a result of a coup
d'état organized by warlords and ex-criminals Tengiz Kitovani and Jaba
Ioseliani. The former Communist boss of Georgia, Eduard Shevardnadze, who
was perceived in the West as a "democratic" politician during his service as
the USSR's Foreign Minister, was invited to rule the country, although his
alleged democratic credentials did not convince the Georgians or former
autonomies within Georgia, who knew Shevardnadze all too well as a staunch
Brezhnevite - one who, for more than 10 years, had ruled Georgia with an
iron fist. As the new Georgian leadership declared all laws adopted during
Soviet times null and void, the leadership of the former Autonomous Republic
of Abkhazia, in order to save Abkhazia's political autonomy from being
overridden, proposed a draft treaty whereby Georgia would become a
federative state of which Abkhazia would be a constituent republic. The
Georgian answer to this initiative was to launch a major military attack on
Abkhazia on 14 August 1992. The Georgian leaders announced that there would
be no autonomies in the new Georgia. To that country's great humiliation,
the war was lost by the undisciplined and poorly trained Georgian army. Most
of Abkhazia's non-Kartvelian minorities (Armenians, Russians, Ukrainians,
Greeks, Turks, etc.) allied themselves with the Abkhazians in their struggle
against the aggressors. In addition, related peoples from the North
Caucasian republics, notably Chechens, Circassians and Abazas, came to
Abkhazia and fought alongside the Abkhazian forces. The war ended in late
September 1993 with the decisive victory of the Abkhazian army and its North
Caucasian allies.
The much speculated-about Russian military assistance to the Abkhazians
should not be overestimated, as it is in practically all Georgian and many
Western publications. First, there was of course no direct involvement by
Russian troops in any Abkhazian operations (apart from the participation of
Russian and Cossack volunteers; Georgia, in turn, was assisted by fighters
from Western Ukraine). Despite allegations, nobody has yet produced any
compelling evidence to prove such involvement. For example, the UNPO human
rights mission that visited Tbilisi at the end of 1993 could not obtain from
the Georgian side any reliable evidence to support such charges.[8]
One could perhaps claim that the bombardment of Georgian positions at the
Gumsta front by Russian military planes could serve as proof. But the
Russians themselves made no great secret of such raids, and explained that
they were provoked by the Georgian artillery shelling of the Russian
military laboratory in Eshera which caused numerous casualties, including
deaths, among the Russian personnel. Arguably, all warfare is a profitable
business, and the war in Chechnya showed that, paradoxically, some Russian
elements sold weapons to the Chechen side in order to make a profit. In the
Georgian-Abkhazian conflict too, all weapons on both sides were, after all,
of Russian origin.
The difference was that while Georgia was getting huge amounts of
weaponry and ammunition from the former Soviet Army free (in accordance with
the CIS Tashkent Agreement, and via many other, non-official, channels),
Abkhazia had to buy weapons from elements of the Russian army stationed in
Abkhazia and beyond. The Russian military had no scruples about selling arms
to any side, although, admittedly, in general their personal sympathies lay
more with the Abkhazians, who were fewer in number and therefore much more
vulnerable. The selling of arms to them was regarded as a fair business, to
counterbalance their numerical weakness. Besides, many weapons were coming
to Abkhazia from or via North Caucasian sources and, probably, also via the
diaspora.
One of the unexpected consequences of the Abkhazian victory became the
mass exodus of ethnic Georgians (or rather Kartvelians, i.e., Georgians,
Megrelians and Svans) from Abkhazia. During the Georgian occupation of parts
of Abkhazia, many local Georgians collaborated with the troops sent by
Tbilisi and, together with these troops, were responsible for acts of murder
and other atrocities, as well as looting, perpetrated against their
Abkhazian, Armenian and Russian neighbours. After the Abkhazian victory,
fearing reprisals, the panic-stricken Kartvelian population of the republic
fled en masse.
The Georgian side accuses Abkhazia of the ethnic cleansing of the
Georgian population of the republic. In response to these accusations the
Abkhazian side has stated that the Georgian population of the territory of
Abkhazia south of Sukhum fled to Georgia and elsewhere before the arrival of
Abkhazian troops, and that it was not the policy or intention of the
Abkhazian government to expel Georgians or any other ethnic group from
Abkhazia.
After the Abkhazian capital Sukhum was retaken by the Abkhazian troops,
as a result of fierce fighting, there were in fact no other major battles
between the Abkhazian and Georgian forces because the latter, demoralized by
their defeat in Sukhum and by the dynamic Abkhazian army advance, rushed in
panic (often leaving their heavy weaponry behind) towards the Georgian
border, or to the Svanetian mountains, in exactly the same way as had
already happened earlier in Gagra. This disorderly retreat caused, in turn,
great panic amongst the local Georgian civilians, who followed the fleeing
Georgian soldiers en masse, with the result that when the victorious
Abkhazians entered the previously occupied territory of their republic to
the south of Sukhum, all they encountered in villages and towns were mostly
deserted Georgian houses. The statement by the Supreme Council of Abkhazia,
issued on 11 October 1993, read:
The local Georgian population, which in the course of a year-long war
either witnessed or participated in the brutal outrages of the Georgian
soldiers against civilian Abkhazians, Armenians, Russians and Greeks (mainly
old people, women and children) (...) preferred to leave Abkhazia for fear
of acts of revenge.
A UN fact-finding mission was sent to Abkhazia by the Secretary-General
in October 1993 to investigate human rights violations, especially the
reports of ethnic cleansing. The mission was sent at the insistence of the
Georgian side, and as a precondition to Georgian participation in talks in
Geneva. Though in its report the mission stressed that it was not in a
position to ascertain whether it had been a policy actively pursued by the
authorities of either side, at any time, to clear the areas under their
control of either the Abkhazian or the Georgian population, at the same time
it clearly stated that most Georgians living in the region between the
Gumsta and Ingur rivers had tried to flee before the arrival of the
Abkhazian forces.[9]
Incidentally, some more objective Georgian authors also prefer not to
exploit the controversial term "ethnic cleansing", speaking instead in terms
of the flight of the Georgians from Abkhazia.[10]
However, official Tbilisi, which is trying to score points in its propaganda
war against the Abkhazian Republic, continues its accusation of "the ethnic
cleansing and genocide of the Georgian population of Abkhazia", while at the
same time disclaiming all responsibility for unleashing the war in Abkhazia
in August 1992 or for the establishment of the regime of terror on the
occupied territory of Abkhazia.
Peace Process
The negotiations process between Georgia and Abkhazia, which started in
December 1993 in Geneva under UN auspices and with mediation by the Russian
Federation, initially produced promising documents, one of the most
important of which was the "Declaration on measures for a political
settlement of the Georgian-Abkhazian conflict", signed on 4 April 1994 in
Moscow. The declaration emphasized the wish of the parties to reinstate
their state-legal relations and outlined the contours of a future common
state. According to this declaration, the Abkhazian Republic is to have its
own constitution, parliament and government, and appropriate state symbols.
The document delimits the spheres of separate and shared Georgian/Abkhazian
competence. Abkhazia is to delegate some of its state responsibilities -
such as foreign policy and foreign economic ties, border guard arrangements,
customs, energy, transport and communications, ecology, civil and human
rights and the rights of ethnic minorities - to the common (federal) organs
of power. All other responsibilities will remain the unique prerogative of
the Abkhazian State. The declaration was signed by the parties to the
conflict and the representatives of Russia, the UN and the OSCE in the
presence of the Russian Foreign Minister, the UN Secretary-General and many
Western ambassadors.
The relative stabilization of the situation in Abkhazia and the deployment
of CIS peacekeeping troops and UN military observers on the border between
Abkhazia and Georgia along the Ingur river allowed some 70,000 Georgian (mainly
Megrelian) refugees to return to their homes in the Gal region of Abkhazia.
These people, however, are suffering because of the destroyed economic
infrastructure and large numbers of landmines, some of which are still being
deployed by subversive Georgian groups.
But the political process of the peaceful reintegration of Georgia and
Abkhazia, as envisaged by the Declaration of 4 April 1994, was given no
follow-up, and the situation took a turn for the worse. What happened was
that Georgia, after having recuperated from the blow inflicted by military
defeat, began revisiting the essential provisions of the Declaration of 4
April and trying to solve the problem of Abkhazia by separate military
agreements with Russia and increased political pressure on Abkhazia. During
the visit by the Russian Prime Minister, Chernomyrdin, to Tbilisi in 1995,
it was agreed that Russia would help to restore Georgia's rule over Abkhazia
in return for five Russian military bases in Georgia for a period of 25
years. These arrangements provoked a strong protest from Abkhazia. Instead
of trying to resolve its differences with Abkhazia by means of mutual
accommodation, Georgia, starting from the false premises that military
intimidation and an economic blockade could force Abkhazia to give up its
claim to sovereignty, preferred to reappear, as in the 19th century, as a
major military ally and foothold for Russia in Transcaucasia. The UN is
supporting the tough stance newly adopted by Georgia, blaming Abkhazia, as
usual, for the breakdown in negotiations. Russian support has brought new
optimism to Georgia that the Abkhazian problem can be solved by combined
Russo-Georgian military action in Abkhazia. The spectre of a new war has
begun to loom over the region.[11]
The political rapprochement between Georgia and Russia has resulted in a
wholesale Russian blockade of Abkhazia aimed at the strangulation of
Abkhazia's civilian population. Since 1995, Russia has established a naval
and land blockade of Abkhazia, closed its borders with Abkhazia and refused
to recognize Abkhazian passports or to allow Abkhazian citizens to travel
abroad. Since April 1997, Russia has cut off all telephone lines connecting
Abkhazia with the outside world, thereby establishing an information
blockade of the small republic. All this raises serious doubts regarding
Russia's capacity to act as a mediator, as such a position requires
neutrality and a balanced approach to both sides in the conflict.
The result of separate Georgian-Russian arrangements undermining Abkhazia is
that the peace talks are nearly at a standstill, and the prospects of a
peaceful settlement are as remote as they were at the beginning of talks in
Geneva three years ago.
Possible Ways Out
Despite such negative developments, I believe that the Georgian-Abkhazian
conflict is one of the most manageable among the conflicts on the territory
of the former Soviet Union, and that there are still grounds for optimism,
provided both sides can overcome sensitive psychological barriers and
demonstrate enough political will to compromise. The recent history of
Georgian-Abkhazian relations has shown that both parties to the conflict
have insufficient strength to achieve the political goals they are pursuing:
Georgia to overrun Abkhazia militarily and abolish its political autonomy,
Abkhazia to gain international recognition as an independent state. This
leaves the parties with room to compromise.
There are at least two crucially important positions that could lead to
swift progress in the Georgian-Abkhazian peace process. First, unlike the
South Ossetian autonomy, Georgia has never officially abolished the
Abkhazian Autonomous Republic, still regarding it as an Autonomous State.
Second, unlike Chechnya in Russia, or Karabakh in Azerbaijan, Abkhazia has
never officially declared its independence from Georgia. This means that
both Georgia and Abkhazia still recognise, de jure and de facto, the
existence of an Abkhazian State. These crucially important positions can
offer quite promising prospects for an early settlement of the Georgian-Abkhazian
conflict. The major issue now is how exactly to accommodate the Abkhazian
Republic's sovereign status, in a future state shared with Georgia, with
Georgian claims to sovereignty over the whole of its territory.
The obvious diplomatic impasse in which Georgian-Abkhazian relations now
find themselves could be neutralized in what I described above as internal
self-determination. According to this formula, the Abkhazian Republic would
remain within the internationally recognized borders of Georgia and would
enjoy broad political autonomy, preserving its own constitution, parliament,
government and state symbols, as well as its national army, while delegating
some other important state functions, such as border control, customs,
transport and communications, foreign policy, etc., to the common federative
bodies: the federal parliament and government. Outside the competence of the
federal institutions, both Georgia and Abkhazia would enjoy full sovereignty
over their own internal affairs on the territory under the control of their
own elected government bodies.
Such a structure will only be stable and capable of bringing about
lasting peace if all parts of the federation are satisfied with their level
of sovereignty. This makes it necessary to create a constitutional
arrangement in which Georgia, Abkhazia, Ajaria and South Ossetia enjoy equal
political rights and are equally subordinated to the common federal
legislative and executive structures. Within such a structure, each of the
constituent republics should have a right of veto on decisions taken by the
federal bodies that directly affect their vital interests. If the parties
agree to make such arrangements, this will enhance their interest in common
economic activity and cooperation, and will inevitably, within an estimated
period of five years, lead to closer reintegration.
There are signs that at least some international structures are ready to
support such a solution to the problem. Thus, recently, in its Resolution of
22 April 1997, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe stressed
the importance of extensive autonomy status for Abkhazia as one of the basic
elements of a political settlement.[12]
Any other arrangement, based on the principle of the subordination of one
people to another, on the inequality of the subjects of a federation or on
old Soviet-style super-centralized rule from Tbilisi, can a priori be
regarded as futile and incapable of bringing lasting peace to this part of
the former Soviet Empire.
International efforts can be instrumental in persuading the parties to
reach a mutually accepted constitutional arrangement concerning the status
of Abkhazia. Such concerted efforts were quite effective in achieving peace
in Bosnia, and are now indispensable in the Israeli-Palestinian peace
process. Unfortunately, in the case of Georgia and Abkhazia all pressure,
including military intimidation and an inhuman economic blockade, is being
put on Abkhazia. This is the wrong path to follow, as it was the UN, OSCE
and individual governments' encouragement of Georgia in its uncompromising
stance on political negotiations with Abkhazia that effectively brought the
whole peace process to a halt.
This one-sided and mistaken approach should be radically changed. It is
very important not to lose momentum and to try to revitalize the peace
process now, before the current favourable situation changes and we become
witnesses to another escalation of hostilities. It could be that either
Georgia will start a new war against Abkhazia, or that Abkhazia, being
convinced that it is futile to expect any equitable arrangement with
Georgia, will declare its complete independence. These are real
possibilities, which could substantially complicate the situation and
diminish the chances of a comprehensive settlement.
Though the participation of Russia as facilitator is crucial for the
conclusion of any lasting agreement between Georgia and Abkhazia, there is
nothing to say that the group around the negotiation table should not
include a new member, representing a country with no direct political or
economic interests in Georgia or Abkhazia. New initiatives, fresh ideas and
probably fresh personalities are needed to push the stalemated peace process
forward and to achieve, as speedily as possible, political arrangements that
would preclude the possibility of the oppression of the smaller nation by
the bigger one, allow thousands of refugees to return to their homes in safe
and dignified conditions, and lay the basis for stability and progress in
this part of Europe.
Notes
1.
The Commander-in-Chief of the Georgian forces in Abkhazia, Colonel Giorgi
Karkarashvili, in an address to the population of Abkhazia broadcast on
Sukhum television on 25 August 1992, warned that "Even if the total number
of Georgians - 100,000 - are killed, then from your [Abkhazian] side all
97,000 will be killed", and he advised the Abkhazian leader V. Ardzinba "not
to act in such a way that the Abkhazian nation is left without descendants"
(cf. G. Amkuab, T. Illarionova, Abxazija: Xronika neobjavlennoj vojny. Chast'
I. 14 avgusta - 14 sentiabria 1992 goda. Moskva, 1992, p. 128). 97,000 was
the approximate number of the entire Abkhazian population of Abkhazia. Soon
after this event Karkarashvili was promoted by Shevardnadze to the rank of
general, and later replaced Kitovani as Georgian Minister of Defence. In an
interview given in the occupied city of Sukhum, another high-ranking
Georgian official, the Minister of State for Abkhazia, Goga Khaindrava, told
the correspondent from Le Monde Diplomatique (published in April 1993) that
"there are only 80,000 Abkhazians, which means that we can easily and
completely destroy the genetic stock of their nation by killing 15,000 of
their youth. And we are perfectly capable of doing this."
2.
"Abkhazi [sic!] terrorist-separatist movement", in point B of the "Resolution
on the situation in Georgia" (B3-1452, 1474, 1490, 1505 and 1516/93,
November 1993).
3.
G. Gotlieb, Nation Against State. A New Approach to Ethnic Conflicts and the
Decline of Sovereignty, New York: Council on Foreign Relations Press, 1993,
pp. 19-20.
4.
No precise figures exist on the relative proportions of Christians, Moslems
or atheists among Abkhazians living in Abkhazia. One may suppose that the
proportion of Christians among the religious Abkhazians must reach 60%. My
personal observations indicate that the number of believers among Abkhazian
intellectuals has increased since the war of 1992-1993. All Abkhazian
Moslems belong to the Hanafi school of Sunni Islam, while Christians are
Russian or (more rarely) Eastern Orthodox. The role of the Abkhazian
language in church ceremonies has increased in recent times. The major
Christian texts have been translated into Abkhazian since the middle of the
19th century. There is no antagonism whatsoever between Christian and Moslem
Abkhazians and mixed marriages are very common. Abkhazia has never known any
form of religious fanaticism, Abkhazians are very tolerant of other faiths,
and, in all fairness, tend to be quite indifferent to matters of religion.
Christian Abkhazians in general are not diligent churchgoers, and until
recently those who regard themselves as Moslems have not had a single mosque
to attend in Abkhazia. As rightly observed by many authors, the plain truth
is that neither Christianity nor Islam forms more than a surface laid over
the old Abkhazian paganism. Diaspora Abkhazians, on the contrary, are
Moslems in the true sense of the word, although they are not renowned for
any fanaticism either.
5.
The pre-emigration figure for Abkhazians was between 130,000 and 150,000,
and for Abkhazo-Abazas about 180,000 (cf. V.A. Chirikba, Common West
Caucasian. The Reconstruction of its Phonological System and Parts of its
Lexicon and Morphology. Leiden: CNWS Publications, 1996, pp. 1-3). In 1897
the first official all-Russia census established the presence in Abkhazia of
58,697 Abkhazians, which comprised 55.3% of Abkhazia's 106,000 population;
the figures for other ethnic groups in Abkhazia were: 25,875 Georgians
(24.4%; these were mainly Megrelians), 6,552 Armenians (6.1%), 5,135
Russians (5.6%) and 5,393 Greeks (5.0%) (cf. S.Z. Lakoba (ed.), Istorija
Abkhazii. Uchebnoe posobie, Gudauta: Alashara, 1993, p. 347).
6.
The exact number of Abkhazians in Turkey is not known, as the official
Turkish data on minorities are notoriously unreliable. Some specialists
speak of more than 100,000 Abkhazians (G.A. Dzidzariya, Makhadzhirstvo i
problemy istorii Abkhazii XIX stoletija. Sukhumi: Alashara, 1982, p. 493),
while other authors estimate their numbers in Turkey (together with that of
the closely related Abazas) at half a million (cf. I. Marykhuba, Abkhazija v
sovetskuju epokhu. Abkhazskie pis'ma (1947-1989), Sbornik dokumentov. Tom 1.
Akua (Sukhum), 1994; P. Overeem, "Report of a UNPO coordinated human rights
mission to Abkhazia and Georgia", in: Central Asian Survey, vol. 14, no. 1,
1995, p. 18). According to the results of my own field research in Turkey,
there are no fewer than 250 Abkhaz-Abaza villages in that country (V.A.
Chirikba, "Distribution of Abkhaz dialects in Turkey", in: Proceedings of
the Conference dedicated to the memory of Tevfik Esenç, Istanbul,
forthcoming). In addition, a large number of Abkhazians are now living in
cities and towns, the most numerous communities being in Istanbul, Ankara,
Duzce, Inegol, Bilecik, Eskishehir, Samsun and Sinop. As well as in Turkey,
there are also some 5,000 Abkhazians in Syria (information from Syrian
Abkhazians); still smaller Abkhazian communities are to be found in some
other Middle Eastern countries. Abkhazian colonies (made up mainly of
Turkish Abkhazians) exist also in many Western European countries, such as
Germany (some 3,000), the Netherlands, Belgium, France, Britain, Switzerland
and Austria. A small Abkhazian community in New Jersey, USA, is mostly made
up of immigrants from Syria.
7.
Apart from the forced emigration to Turkey, another factor responsible for
the sharp decrease in the relative number of Abkhazians in Abkhazia was the
(often forced) resettlement from Georgia to Abkhazia of tens of thousands of
Georgians. This resettlement policy, aimed at shifting the demographic
balance in Abkhazia in favour of ethnic Georgians, was successfully carried
out by the Communist authorities of Georgia up to 1992, but this policy was
practised on its largest scale in the 1930s and 1940s, under the rule of
Stalin and Beria.
8.
P. Overeem, op.cit., p. 138.
9.
UN Document S/26795.
10.
R. Gachechiladze, The New Georgia. Space, Society, Politics, London: UCL
Press, 1995, pp. 43, 178. According to the Georgian State Committee for
Refugees and Displaced Persons, some 160,000 refugees from Abkhazia have
been officially registered and accommodated in 63 districts of Georgia, cf.
"The Georgian Chronicle", February-March 1994, as cited in A. Zverev, Ethnic
Conflicts in the Caucasus. In: Bruno Coppieters (ed.). Contested Borders in
the Caucasus, Brussels: VUB University Press, 1996, pp. 13-71.
11.
The dangerously increased tension was due to certain declarations made by
Georgian leaders and to the actions carried out by the Russian military in
Abkhazia. Thus, in an interview published in Nezavisimaya Gazeta (29 June
1994), the Georgian leader Shevardnadze announced that the so-called "Council
of Ministers of the Autonomous Republic of Abkhazia", based in Tbilisi,
would soon move to the Gal region. In its statement of 29 June, the
Abkhazian Supreme Council characterized Shevardnadze's declaration as "provocative",
and expressed deep concern about the actions of the peacekeeping force which,
by permitting the uncontrolled mass return of refugees, had caused the
destabilization of the situation in the region. On two occasions, around 15
May and 15 July 1995, tension in Abkhazia rose considerably owing to the
statements issued by Georgian officials in Tbilisi, who called for the mass
repatriation to Abkhazia of Georgian refugees. The statements made in early
July by the Russian Commander of the CIS peacekeeping force, endorsing such
an uncontrolled mass repatriation and promising the repatriates the
protection of his forces, sparked sharp criticism from Abkhazia's officials,
who declared that this could result in renewed hostilities. In the end, the
much-heralded mass return of refugees was halted. In September 1995 a high-ranking
Russian delegation headed by Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin visited
Tbilisi. On 15 September the sides concluded a number of agreements, among
them one on Russian military bases in Georgia, including the base in Gudauta,
and they declared their support for the principle of territorial integrity
and the inviolability of existing borders, condemning "aggressive separatism
and terrorism in any form" (cf. S/1995/937). The Russian-Georgian deal on
military bases and the unexpected announcement that military exercises would
be carried out on 30 September 1995 by the CIS peacekeeping troops,
obviously designed to exert pressure on Abkhazia, prompted the Abkhazian
forces to go into a state of heightened alert. It was planned to carry out
the exercises in the Gal region of Abkhazia, in parallel with the
introduction there of a CIS battalion consisting mainly of ethnic Georgians.
Following the arrival of this battalion, it was planned that Georgian police
troops would enter the region. These plans coincided with Shevardnadze's
statement that the problem of the Gal region would be solved in the next few
days, and that Georgian sovereignty over this region of Abkhazia would be
restored (cf. the statement by the Abkhazian Parliament on 4 October 1995).
On 20 March 1996 tension between the Abkhazian authorities
and the Russian border troops in Abkhazia again rose sharply. A Russian
military ship, N 040, entered Sukhum Bay without permission from the
Abkhazian authorities and, having arrested the Ukrainian trading ship "Vega",
forced it to proceed to the nearby Russian port of Sochi. This incident,
which happened during Shevardnadze's visit to Moscow, was supposedly meant
as a pro-Georgian gesture. During Shevardnadze's visit Russia gave in to the
Georgian demand that all foreign ships bound for Abkhazia - even those with
humanitarian cargoes - would have to pass through customs in the Georgian
port of Poti. In addition, it was decided that the Russians would forbid the
boarding of any passengers or loading of any cargo in the port of Sukhum,
which was tantamount to an almost total naval blockade of Abkhazia. In its
statement of 21 March 1996, the Abkhazian Government protested against these
measures, regarding them as having been taken unilaterally in the interests
of Georgia and interfering in the internal affairs of Abkhazia. On 2 July
1996 an Abkhazian police post on the Gal canal was fired at with rocket-propelled
grenades and small arms. At the end of September 1996, Georgia carried out
military exercises in the vicinity of the conflict zone, contravening the
cease-fire agreement of 14 May 1994. These and some other incidents
seriously aggravated the situation and led many to think there was a real
possibility of renewed hostilities.
12.
Resolution 233 (97), cf.
www.coe.fr/cp/97/233a(97).htm.
Viacheslav A. Chirikba
completed his doctoral dissertation in 1986 at the Moscow Institute of
Linguistics, USSR Academy of Sciences. From 1991 to 1996, Dr. Chirikba was a
professor and research fellow at Leiden University, The Netherlands, where
he authored a Doctoral dissertation on the History of West Caucasian
Languages. In 1993-1994, he was a member of the Abkhaz delegation at the
Georgian-Abkhaz peace negotiations in Geneva, and since 1993, he has been
the Permanent Representative of Abkhazia to UNPO, The Hague. Dr. Chirikba is
the author of numerous articles on the Georgian-Abkhaz conflict and has
organized and participated in several conferences on the subject worldwide.
The Georgian-Abkhazian Conflict
By Alexander Krylov, The Security of the Caspian Sea Region,
Oxford University Press, 2001
The
Georgian - Abkhaz Conflict: Past, Present, Future
JRL Research & Analytical Supplement, Issue No: 24, May 2004
Post-war Developments
in the Georgian-Abkhazian Dispute
By George Hewitt, Parliamentary Human Rights Group June 1996

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