Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Abkhazia: President, opposition trade accusations

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

  • Abkhazia: President, opposition trade accusations

    EurasiaNet, NY
    March 4 2007

    ABKHAZIA: PRESIDENT, OPPOSITION TRADE ACCUSATIONS
    Liz Fuller 3/04/07
    A EurasiaNet Partner Post from RFE/RL


    Less than a week before the March 4 parliamentary elections in
    Georgia's unrecognized breakaway republic of Abkhazia, opposition
    candidates have accused President Sergei Bagapsh of interfering in
    the election process with the aim of ensuring the election of a
    parliament "loyal" to the present leadership.

    Less than a week before the March 4 parliamentary elections in
    Georgia's unrecognized breakaway republic of Abkhazia, opposition
    candidates have accused President Sergei Bagapsh of interfering in
    the election process with the aim of ensuring the election of a
    parliament "loyal" to the present leadership.

    The pro-Bagapsh camp is fielding candidates in all 35 constituencies;
    to judge from their surnames, as listed in an appeal to the
    electorate posted on February 26 by the official website apsny.ru,
    they include three Slavs, two Armenians, and one Georgian.

    On February 23, Bagapsh held a press conference (originally scheduled
    for February 12), carried live by state television, in which
    opposition deputies subsequently claimed he made derogatory comments
    about them that constitute direct interference in the election
    process and that triggered "a storm of indignation and concern" among
    the population at large. That allegation was made in a February 26
    statement carried by the website kavkaz-uzel.ru and signed by 19
    opposition candidates, against five of whom Bagapsh is said to have
    leveled unfounded criticism.

    One of the five is Anri Djergenia, who from June 2001-November 2002
    served as prime minister under Bagapsh's predecessor Vladislav
    Ardzinba. The statement further quotes Bagapsh as having told the
    electorate they have a choice between voting for "those who will
    bring peace and stability, or those who want to bring us to the verge
    of civil war."

    Damaging Evidence

    Specifically, Bagapsh is said to have admitted that he has tried to
    persuade one of the 19 signatories, Lieutenant General Vladimir
    Arshba, a former first deputy defense minister and chief of General
    Staff, to withdraw his candidacy in a "Russian" constituency and
    register in a constituency where the rival candidates were Abkhaz.

    Even more damaging, Bagapsh was said to have accused Arshba of trying
    to organize a coup d'etat, an accusation the 19 signatories reject as
    "absurd." Neither of Bagapsh's imputed accusations against Arshba
    figure in the verbatim extracts from the press conference carried by
    apsny.ru and posted on Bagapsh's website (http:www.abkhaziagov.org).

    Eight of the 19 opposition deputies also signed a formal request to
    Abkhaz Prosecutor-General Safarbey Mikanba and State Security Service
    Chairman Yury Ashuba to convene a press conference and comment on
    Bagapsh's alleged accusations against Arshba, according to regnum.ru
    on February 26. Regnum.ru also quoted Arshba as accusing the
    republic's authorities on February 26 in a televised campaign address
    of slander, infringing on his constitutional rights, and trying to
    "get rid of an inconvenient candidate."

    Bagapsh admitted in a February 27 statement that he asked Arshba to
    "take into account the importance" of Abkhazia's Russian community
    and not put forward his candidacy in a constituency where a Russian
    was already registered. At the same time, Bagapsh insisted that his
    sole consideration in making that request was to preclude interethnic
    tension. He further affirmed his conviction that he had "the moral
    right" to make such a request, and that it did not constitute a
    violation of the constitution.

    But in a seeming departure from his earlier appeal to the electorate
    not to classify society in terms of "us and them," he went on to say
    that "it seems we are pursuing different goals. One is left with the
    impression that some opposition representatives are prepared to do a
    great deal, including using the rostrum of the election campaign, in
    order to slake their thirst to return to power and appease their
    pathological desire to gain control once again over public property,"
    apsnypress reported.

    Accusations Exchanged

    Georgian media have seized on the indications of rising tensions
    between the Abkhaz authorities and opposition. Bagapsh's spokesman
    Kristian Bzhania rejected on February 27 as untrue Georgian media
    reports of exchanges of fire in Sukhum(i) between supporters of
    Bagapsh and Khadjimba.

    Nonetheless, Abkhaz Interior Minister Otar Khetsia told Apsnypress on
    February 28 that additional police will deployed to Gali Raion on
    polling day to maintain calm. Bagapsh's representative in Gali,
    Ruslan Kishmaria, claimed that Georgian special services are
    threatening to burn down the homes of any villagers who cast their
    ballots in the March 4 poll.
Working...
X