Showing posts with label 2011 elections. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2011 elections. Show all posts

Wednesday, 25 January 2012

Liana Kvarchelia to Freedom House report on Abkhazia

Dear Sirs,

My name is Liana Kvarchelia and  I am a civil society activist in Abkhazia. I am following the Freedom House reports on Abkhazia and appreciate that in general your reports capture the key issues in the region. However there are certain inaccuracies, which I think are quite important and need to be addressed. I will touch upon only  one of them. The report of 2011 says that NGOs in Abkhazia are not permitted to monitor elections. This is not true. I am a member of the League of Voters for Fair Elections in Abkhazia. We have monitored presidential elections since 2004. Since last year a special amendment has been adopted by the  Parliament that officially allows NGOs to monitor elections. This has been the result of lobbying on the part of NGOs. Prior to that we monitored elections without any provisions in the legislation and had no problems with reagrd to access either to polling station and local election committees, or to the Central election committee.

If you need further information on the issue, I will be happy to provide it or send you the contacts of my colleagues from the  NGO community - members of the League.

Sincerely yours,
Liana Kvarchelia
Liana Kvarchelia Centre for Humanitarian Programmes
Sukhum, Republic of Abkhazia
e-mail: lkvarchelia@yahoo.com

Friday, 9 September 2011

Truth will out

A reply to Daniel Hamilton’s article "The Abkhazian Presidential election: an irrelevant sideshow."

It seems that minds of commentators have been entirely seized by the latest Abkhazian presidential elections, and totally biased, partial and unfair articles, similar in character one to another, have sprung up like mushrooms after a shower of rain, and Abkhazia has become the talk of the town.

Who could ever have thought back in Soviet times that Abkhazia would ever attract so much attention and become spoken about every single minute, as seems to happening nowadays? This is especially true of internet resources, where people sometimes, regrettably, assert false and critical things about our country, which they have never personally visited and about which they have not the slightest idea with respect to everything that has happened in this tiny piece of the globe over the last 19 years.

One can immediately grasp the prejudiced attitude at the start of Mr. Hamilton’s article when he places titles like ‘President’ and ‘Acting President’ in quotes. It is as if the author fears being accused of contravening international law, if he does not resort to the quotation-marks. Neither could he hide his arrogance, given his caustic remarks  on the relationship between Abkhazia and Russia and the few other countries which have dared to recognise the independence of the Abkhazian state despite the huge efforts made by the Georgian authorities and their Western friends to frustrate these acts of recognition.

Mr. Hamilton, the Director of Big Brother Watch, states: “This election does nothing to strengthen the case for the independence of Abkhazia.” One should point out to the author that elections are a significant aspect of modern democracy developing in a sovereign state in which people vote and select their government to lead their country. To call this act “farcical”, when (pace The New York Times) the ballot was observed by representatives of 28 countries from all over the globe, is blatant nonsense. Mr. Hamilton ignores facts and blindly supports Georgia, which has regularly instigated conflicts for the past several decades. And this commentator should not forget that Georgia itself was responsible for the ethnic cleansing of  non - Georgian population after its unlawful invasion of Abkhazia in 1992. His entirely one-sided approach and proclivity to throw accusations exclusively at the Abkhazians betrays his absolute ignorance of the history of the conflict. To repeat, Georgia bears the responsibility for the war and ethnic cleansing its troops committed against non - Georgians during its occupation of Abkhazia in 1992-93. When Abkhazian forces returned to the capital Sukhum and eastern parts of Abkhazia, local Georgians (Megrelians) elected to leave for Georgia before Abkhazian soldiers appeared in their settlements, as they were afraid to stay and be accused of collaboration with the occupying forces. This fact was established by contemporary commissions sent both by the UN and UNPO, Mr. Hamilton, and your rewriting of history does you and your argument no credit.

In similar vein we have the assessment given by the “Human Rights Watch” report of last year. It examined the welfare of ethnic Georgians returning to the province and was scathing, outlining the “arbitrary interference by Abkhazia’s de facto authorities with returnees’ rights to freedom of movement, education, and other political and economic rights”. The person who cited the report is not familiar with reality. He should have been aware of the fact that the Georgian government does not recognise officially the returnees to the Gal Region of Abkhazia and even places obstacles in the way of international organisations like UNCHR calculating their number for the simple reason that this would interfere with its own manipulation of the refugee-issue. Human Rights Watch and other respected organisations pay no great attention to the living conditions of the refugees from Abkhazia who have been resident in Georgia for a full 18 years since the war instigated in Abkhazia by Shevardnadze’s military junta. Georgian authorities have consistently and artificially hindered the process of integrating the refugees into Georgian society, leaving the problem of the refugees unsolved, whilst blocking the process of any decision taking and insisting on a once-and-for-all mass return, instead of seeking alternative, more reasonable solutions. A mass-return of the refugees could easily cause the conflict to flare up once again. So, either the author is not competent or he deliberately distorts the fact of Georgia deliberately wrecking the talks on conflict-resolution and their violation of agreements. Failure to mention all naturally (mis)leads the reader to a biased (mis)understanding of the conflict and the processes in progress here, and one can only conclude from the article of Mr. Hamilton that he is one of those thus befuddled.

Unfortunately, no foreign commentators, who are so exercised by the problem of the Georgian refugees, ever mention the descendants of those Abkhazian refugees who, since the end of the Russian–Caucasian war in 1864 have had to find shelter in Turkey and other countries without ever being awarded the status of refugees and without any right of return to their homeland, as is accepted in international law. Better that Mr. Hamilton not talk at all about the right of free movement. Otherwise, he should be looking into the gross violations of the human rights of the citizens of Abkhazia, who for years had great difficulty crossing the Abkhaz-Russian border (particularly after the war started in Chechnya) and who were similarly subjected to years of blockade imposed on Abkhazia by the Yeltsin regime in a move intended to compel the return of Abkhazia to Georgia and its full reincorporation into that hostile state, as was achieved during Soviet times under the Georgian Joseph Stalin — so much for the view of Mr. Hamilton and his ilk that Russia has always favoured Abkhazia and that the Abkhazians are puppets of the Kremlin.

Finally, we would remind the Big Brother Watch commentator that Abkhazians travelling on Russian passports still face difficulties entering certain ‘freedom loving’ countries within the European Union; indeed, visas have been refused (e.g. by Germany) to sick individuals who have subsequently died for lack of appropriate treatment — a fine example of the EU’s commitment to human rights, wouldn’t you say, Mr. Hamilton?

Wednesday, 31 August 2011

A Farrago of Misinformation from a Former Minister for Europe

A response to the article "Abkhazian Elections: Russia's pawn in Georgian game?of Denis MacShane, a Labour Party member of the British parliament and former minister for Europe in Tony Blair's government. He was a member of the Party of European Socialists executive committee for several years. 


Abkhazia has been to the polls and elected the one to whom people legitimately, honestly and independently gave the majority of their voices. Why does it happen nowadays that certain Members of the British Parliament one after another, under the pressure of Georgian propaganda and in full admiration of Georgian disloyalty to Russia, involve themselves in the complexity of Abkhaz-Georgian relations? Would it not be more equitable and prudent if, instead, they displayed a lack of prejudice and balance between both parties, assuming that they really wish peace for this part of the world, which from ancient times has never enjoyed sustained tranquillity because of its favourable geographical location and which has now seemingly become so important for Europe and especially for two British MPs (former junior-ministers in the government of Tony Blair) with self-confessed interests in European affairs, namely the Rt. Hon. Bruce George and Denis MacShane?

The whole world observed the election-process in Abkhazia thanks to a range of observers from across the globe, and, without any hiccups, it went smoothly without the slightest hint of trouble, thereby confounding the expectations of those Jeremiahs who were eagerly expecting a bloody scenario. The prudence and wisdom of the citizenry of Abkhazia exhibited that day for some reason apparently darkened the minds of some supposedly civilised commentators.

The most staggering thing is that a British ex-minister for Europe arrogantly deigns to pronounce negatively on the elections in Abkhazia without ever having visited the country. Like others one could name, he has undiscriminating swallowed all that the Georgian propaganda-machine has fed him, including the fabricated notion that Abkhazia is under the occupation of the Russian Federation. Indeed, the phrase ‘occupied territory’ has been repeated so often over recent months that it has become quite hackneyed. And, of course, it offers the international community a quite false picture of the nature of everyday reality in Abkhazia; Georgian policy-makers continue to try to influence Westerners (especially the gullible Americans) by losing no opportunity to disseminate the phrase. What is most alarming is that the latter evince no interest in finding out if there is any substance to the claim. Can they not see that it is a ruse designed to drag out more money and assistance for this weak Caucasian state, Georgia emerged after the post-Soviet wars that it provoked itself against two of the autonomies (Abkhazia, South Ossetia) created artificially during the black terror of (Georgian!) Stalin’s hegemony and seems (quity falsely) to lay the blame for its self-imposed miseries on others — a classic example of the psychosis of victimhood.

What credence can be given to the MacShane farrago of misinformation when he writes that the election in Abkhazia in 2009 was "won" by Moscow's man, Sergei Bagapsch [Bagapsh]? The fact is that in the 2004 election, Moscow made no secret of its backing for the late Bagapsh’s opponent, Raoul Khadzhimba, and was not pleased when his opponent won. If he were acquainted with the recent history of our recently deceased president, Macshane would never have written such nonsense. It would be nice if all the countries who have come out against recognising the legitimacy of the elections in Abkhazia could take the time to remember their own, often uneasy, paths to modern statehood.

Russia recognised the independence of Abkhazia, and it did not shrink from encouraging other countries to do the same. It would be interesting to examine when and how quickly this or that European country earned recognition. What about Kosovo? Was recognition here not achieved basically because Kosovo lies very close to Western Europe and it was hoped to quench the threat of Balkan fire being reunited by the recognition of a second Albanian state under the UN umbrella? This is the same august body which refuses to listen to Abkhazian or Ossetian opinions and privileges just one side in the conflicts, namely the aggressor-state of Georgia.

Concerning the fate of refugees and their right to return, what is to be said of those Abkhazian descendants forced to leave Abkhazia in 1864 - 1877-78? According to the 1951 UN Convention on Refugees, those who use arms in an armed struggle and then flee do not fall under the international definition of refugees. The responsibility for these people falls fully on the Georgian side. It is important to note here that a great many of those who fled from Abkhazia were recent immigrants. They were forcely resettled by Stalin and his cruel assistant Beria from Megrelia to Abkhazia. See Demographic change in Abkhazia 1897–1989, http://www.c-r.org/our-work/accord/georgia-abkhazia/graph2.php. This will be very interesting for Mr. Macshane to compare with the data introduced by him in his article. His sophisticated reasoning that "Russia is content to create a no man’s land without freedom or democracy. Georgia’s President Saakashvili has pledged not to use force to take back the territory and so Tbilisi is trying a different strategy of opening up Georgian healthcare and educational facilities to residents of Abkhazia, rebuilding transport links, and facilitating greater connections between communities ripped apart by conflict" shows again where this predistined interpretation comes from.

Abkhazia is building a democratic state and it is supposed to be deeply committed to the principles of democracy, though the circumstances in which it exists have been more then hard and all this recent time especially the country stumbles over the ignorance or misunderstanding of international community.

Finally, what would the esteemed ex-Minister for Europe say if Georgia decides to recognise Abkhazia? This idea has started to circulate among Georgian society of late, promulgated by no less than the person who began the war on our soil in 1992, Eduard Shevardnadze. MacShane and others of his persuasion would do well to ponder this point.