Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

TBILISI: Beyond A Joke

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

  • TBILISI: Beyond A Joke

    BEYOND A JOKE

    The Messenger, Georgia
    April 17 2007

    The comments of MP Beso Jugheli, who said that a proposed tax for
    people living in historical areas is "not directed against Georgians"
    because many people of non-Georgian ethnicity live in historical
    neighbourhoods, not only shame the parliament of Georgia, but are an
    affront to the thousands of years of Georgia's multi ethnic history,
    are a setback for conflict resolution, a gift to those that want to
    characterise Georgia as an ethno-nationalist pariah, and undermine
    President Saakashvili's concerted effort to build a sense of nationhood
    built on civil rather than ethnic principles.

    Even if said in jest, the comments, said in an interview with Georgian
    daily 24 Saati on April 12, were in extremely poor taste and must
    immediately be retracted, and the MP must make a full and frank
    apology even if no harm was intended. As this paper went to press,
    the MP had not apologised.

    The comments are just plain wrong on so many levels. Firstly, the
    ethnic Armenian, Azeri, Kurdish inhabitants of old Tbilisi have been
    a part of the fabric of the city since time immemorial, and have
    contributed enormously to Tbilisi's development, success, and charm.

    President Saakashvili, speaking recently of the old town, pointed
    out that in few other locations in the world can you find a church,
    synagogue and mosque on the same block. Indeed, when King David
    the Builder retook Tbilisi from the Arabs in 1122 he protected
    the city's multi faith, multi ethnic population, and protected
    religious freedom. As if that wasn't proof enough of his cosmopolitan
    credentials, he invited some 40 000 North Caucasian Kipchak tribesmen
    to settle in Georgia, and his first wife was Armenian. This is
    something that Georgians of all ethnicities should be proud of, and
    in his speeches the president consistently refers to all Georgians,
    enumerating Ossetian, Abkhaz, Armenian Georgians and so on. At a
    speech in Bakuriani he even mentioned Dutch and American Georgians.

    But, not only do Jugheli's comments define Georgians purely in terms
    of ethnicity, they also indirectly advocate ethnic discrimination. In
    justifying a law by saying it targets non-ethnic Georgians the comments
    inadvertently support discrimination on ethnic grounds.

    Russia regularly accuses the Saakashvili administration of being
    virulently ethno-nationalist, hell bent on establishing 'Georgia
    for the [ethnic] Georgians', and statements like these totally play
    into their hands. They will very likely make considerable hay out of
    these comments. Similarly, the separatist regimes in South Ossetia and
    Abkhazia-regimes which genuinely discriminate on ethnic grounds-will
    be provided with extra ammunition. We doubt the comments will go down
    well in Georgia's predominantly Armenian region of Javakheti also.

    MP Jugheli represents the constituency of Chugureti, a multi-ethnic
    district at the heart of the city, and one that was actually built by
    nineteenth century immigrants to the city, so it would be very much
    in his interests to apologise to his constituents. We trust that
    his comments were a joke that misfired, a gaffe, embarrassing but
    forgivable, but nonetheless, he must take immediate steps to redress
    the situation and apologise for the enormous offence he has caused.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X