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Georgian Report Says Armenian Community Major Force In Abkhaz Electi

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  • Georgian Report Says Armenian Community Major Force In Abkhaz Electi

    GEORGIAN REPORT SAYS ARMENIAN COMMUNITY MAJOR FORCE IN ABKHAZ ELECTION

    Rustavi-2 TV, Tbilisi, Georgia
    Jan 16 2007

    [Presenter] In the forthcoming elections, [Abkhaz separatist president
    and vice president] Sergey Bagapsh and Raul Khadzhimba will be once
    again sorting out their relationship. In the space of one month, the de
    facto government will hold local and then parliamentary elections [on
    11 February and 4 March respectively] in which the Armenian community,
    the Russian Citizens' Union and Abkhaz parties will contest seats.

    Nato Makhviladze is live. Nato, is Khadzhimba strong enough to compete
    with Bagapsh?

    [Correspondent] Raul Khadzhimba has always been viewed as [Russian
    President Vladimir] Putin's favourite. The Russians have not lost
    interest in him. This is quite a trump card because Russian special
    services have always had the situation in Abkhazia under their control.

    Raul Khadzhimba is quite a strong and influential figure. With the
    elections approaching, he has managed to lure members of Amtsakhara
    over to this side. These are veteran fighters. He also declared war
    on one of the stronger communities, the Armenian communities.

    [Passage omitted]

    [Malkhaz Akishbaia, chair of the Tbilisi-backed Abkhaz cabinet of
    ministers] They will fight for the electorate, that is to say, for the
    Armenian community, the Georgian refugees who have returned to Gali and
    ethnic Abkhaz. We should expect a serious conflict, with the situation
    during the election potentially occasionally spiralling out of control.

    [Khadzhimba, over the phone] Let no-one expect any kind of
    destabilization. This won't happen. The elections will be calm.

    [Q] People say that you have tense relations with Bagapsh.

    [Khadzhimba] Who has?

    [Q] You, with the president.

    [Khadzhimba] Perhaps this is what some want but, trust me, in reality
    everything is normal.

    [Correspondent] United Abkhazia and Amtsakhara have already been
    registered for the elections. United Abkhazia is viewed as a party
    which supports Bagapsh, while members of Amtsakhara have been lured
    over by Khadzhimba. Representatives of the Armenian community too are
    part of Bagapsh's clan. They hold strong economic levers. Besides,
    Armenians comprise 60 per cent of the Abkhaz population. With the
    elections approaching, acts of provocation against the Armenian
    community have become more frequent.

    [Arno Stepanyan, chair of the Multiethnic Georgia NGO] [There have
    been] explosions in Armenian schools. The circulation of propaganda
    literature of anti-Armenian nature in Abkhazia is becoming more
    widespread.

    [Q] Who do you think is doing this?

    [Stepanyan] Presumably, senior Abkhaz officials oriented towards
    certain Russian forces.

    [Q] Do you mean Khadzhimba?

    [Stepanyan] I do not excluded that Mr Khadzhimba may be among them.

    [Correspondent] The Armenian community is nevertheless planning
    to take part in the parliamentary election and demands five seats
    in the 35-member parliament [as said]. The chair of parliament's
    health committee, Galust Trapizonyan, has already made a statement
    to this effect.

    [Stepanyan] Presumably, the local Armenian community will win five
    seats in the Abkhaz parliament. This effectively means that they will
    control 17-per cent of the seats. [Passage omitted: ethnic Georgian
    residents of Gali think their votes will be rigged, correspondent said;
    local woman said she did not intend to vote]
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