Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Georgian Resettlement Scheme Blamed for Tensions

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Georgian Resettlement Scheme Blamed for Tensions

    Institute for war and Peace
    01-Apr-05

    Georgian Resettlement Scheme Blamed for Tensions
    In an ethnically mixed part of Georgia, tensions are high as locals blame
    new settlers for crime wave.
    By Zaza Baazov in Tsalka, southern Georgia (CRS No. 280, 01-Apr-05)
    Ethnic issues are playing a part in growing communal frictions in a region
    west of the Georgian capital. But both the government and local residents
    say the tension is more about crime, poverty and bad policies than real
    animosity in this diverse part of the country.
    Rising crime has worsened relations between original residents in the Tsalka
    district - mostly Armenians and Greeks - and newcomers from other parts of
    Georgia.
    Feelings run so high that Tbilisi deployed a ten-man unit of crack police in
    the village of Avranlo after an inter-communal clash.
    The police's job is to keep the Armenians and Georgians in check, not to
    make peace between the communities.
    "They haven't been dispatched here as peacekeepers to reconcile the
    Armenians and Ajarians," said a local resident. "Instead, they are operating
    at night - combating criminals, and checking the documents of everyone they
    meet on the streets."
    The trouble began when an elderly Greek couple, the Kaloyerovs, were victims
    of a violent mugging which left them both in hospital.
    The couple's relatives, who are Armenian, took matters into their own hands
    and attacked Ajarian newcomers in Avranlo, beating up about 15 of them and
    damaging a local school.
    The clash was serious enough for Georgian interior minister Vano
    Merabishvili to come to the village himself.
    Tsalka district has always been ethnically diverse, with most villages there
    inhabited by Armenians, Azerbaijanis and Greeks.
    The demographics shifted radically in the Nineties: after Georgia became
    independent in 1991, the collapsing economy drove many people to leave the
    country. As in other parts of Georgia, many opted for Russia, but the
    minorities in this district also emigrated to Armenia and Greece.
    By the mid-Nineties, the area received an influx of people resettled from
    landslip-prone mountainous areas of Ajaria, in southwest Georgia, and
    Svanetia, high in the Caucasus mountains, under a government programme to
    offer such vulnerable rural communities a more secure future.
    The arrival of the settlers soon created frictions between old and new
    residents of Tsalka district. And because the newcomers belonged to the
    ethnic majority, the media started talking about inter-ethnic violence.
    Svans are closely related to the Georgians, while Ajarians are ethnically
    Georgian, differing only in that they have a Muslim rather than Christian
    heritage.
    Many Armenians here believe the resettlement policy is a deliberate
    government attempt at social engineering, to create a more Georgian
    population mix.
    Not all Armenians agree with this analysis. Razmik Anesyan, from the village
    of Ozni, said, " The people who have described this as an ethnic problem are
    journalists who've spent one hour here and drawn some odd conclusions."
    Leila Metreveli, Georgia's deputy minister for refugees and resettlement,
    says the assertion that the government has embarked on some kind of ethnic
    project is nonsense. "Tsalka district was chosen [for resettlement] because
    there's a lot of abandoned houses and uncultivated land there, not because
    of its ethnic composition," she told IWPR.
    Guram Svanidze of the Georgian parliament's human rights committee, sees
    ethnic differences as incidental to the real problem.
    "I wouldn't describe these conflicts as ethnic," he told IWPR. "They are due
    to another reason - social disorder and economic problems. The local,
    established population consists of Greeks and Armenians, while the ethnic
    Georgian newcomers have not settled in."
    Slavik Kuchukyan, who heads the Armenian community in Tsalka, says no one is
    against Georgians coming into the area. "On the contrary, it is actually
    better for us. We can learn the Georgian language from contact with them. If
    you don't know Georgian, you won't be accepted into public service."
    However, language differences have proved a barrier to good relations, since
    many young people in the area do not know Georgian, while their counterparts
    from Ajaria often cannot speak Russian - a common lingua franca - and
    certainly would not understand Armenian.
    Many Armenians told IWPR they believed religious differences played a part,
    with the Muslim Ajarians at odds with local Armenian and Greek Christian
    practices.
    Razmik Anesyan says that Ajarians in his village of Ozni "go to pray in a
    mosque in an Azerbaijani village several kilometres away, and they can't
    bury the dead in Christian graveyards. It's rumoured that there have been
    acts of vandalism [of cemeteries. It all increases the tension".
    Attempts by the local authorities to build bridges between communities have
    often failed to overcome the hostility. A friendly football match between
    local lads and migrants in the village of Kizil-Kilisa descended into a
    massive fistfight.
    Many Armenians and Greeks are conscious that they too were once newcomers -
    the two communities began arriving as refugees from Ottoman Turkey two
    centuries ago.
    Hayk Meltonyan, a local member of the Georgian parliament, says the
    longstanding residents just want to see some order imposed to a chaotic
    migration process. "The only thing that we want is to stop the mass
    resettlement temporarily," he said. "We need to take a look at the issues,
    and provide legal arrangements for the lives of those who have already moved
    to Tsalka."
    Other local officials also believe the resettlement programme has been
    mismanaged. The scheme to move communities away from mountain areas prone to
    landslides and avalanches started up in 1988, when Georgia was still part of
    the Soviet Union.
    The demand remains high - the ministry for refugees and resettlement
    estimates that about 200,000 people in the highlands of Ajaria alone need to
    be relocated to lower-risk areas.
    But not enough new homes have been built for the settlers, and it is only in
    the last six years that the authorities have started buying existing houses.
    Impatient settlers have simply moved into unoccupied homes, often in Greek
    villages, and tilling the farmland.
    As a result, desperate migrants started illegally occupying houses and
    farmland, mostly in Greek villages. Others find themselves in a subordinate
    position as tenants on land owned by the original residents, and the
    situation is worsened by the lack of clearly regulated ownership and
    distribution of farming land
    There has also been an upsurge in crime, which gets blamed on the newcomers.
    "The fact is that both the local population and the migrants are hostages to
    the government's lack of professionalism and concern," said Tsalka district
    administration chief Mikheil Tskitishvili.
    According to district police chief Zurab Keshelashvili, "There is zero
    criminality among the local population, with the exception of minor brawls.
    It is the migrants who are mostly involved in thefts, robberies and
    brigandage. Visitors, as they are called, were involved in the two most
    recent attacks on Greeks."
    Some villagers draw a distinction between the earlier migrants who have now
    established themselves and more recent arrivals, whom they blame for much of
    the trouble.
    Vardo Yegoyan, from Kizil-Kilisa, recalled that after a couple of difficult
    years, original residents and the early wave of settlers became good
    neighbours. "The current conflicts have to do with a new group of migrants,
    most of whom did not move here as part of the environmental resettlement,"
    he said. "Robberies and bandit attacks have become regular occurrences."
    Yegoyan added, "No one would justify beating people or smashing things up,
    but when the police stand idly by, the only thing people can do is to
    resolve their own problems themselves."
    Police chief Keshelashvili said it had been hard to cope given the few
    resources he had before Tbilisi sent down the extra ten-man squad, "Fifteen
    policemen with two cars can hardly cope with the crime situation in 42
    villages."
    Settlers say they are being unfairly branded as troublemakers because of
    offences committed by a small number of criminals.
    "We're peasant farmers. Most of us never even leave our land holdings," said
    an Ajarian settler who gave his name as Jumber, "but the rules round here
    are that if one person commits a crime, everyone gets beaten for it.
    Property left behind by [emigrating] Greeks is being stolen, and Ajarians
    are getting the blame.
    "So it's the robbers who are fomenting trouble, setting people against each
    other."
    Zaza Baazov is a freelance journalist in Tbilisi.
Working...
X