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Georgia's Ethnic Minorities Still Sidelined: Watchdog

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  • Georgia's Ethnic Minorities Still Sidelined: Watchdog

    GEORGIA'S ETHNIC MINORITIES STILL SIDELINED: WATCHDOG

    Agence France Presse
    June 15, 2010 Tuesday 2:58 PM GMT

    Georgia needs to work harder to welcome religious and ethnic minorities
    into mainstream society despite real efforts in recent years, the
    Council of Europe's anti-racism agency warned Tuesday.

    The European Commission against Racism and Intolerence (ECRI) first
    praised Georgia's adoption last year of an action plan on integrating
    its minorities.

    It pointed out "positive initiatives in fighting discrimination on
    the grounds of 'race', colour, language, religion, nationality or
    national or ethnic origin," including such steps as hiring ethnic
    minority police officers.

    ECRI also found the situation of refugees from Russia's breakaway
    Chechnya region -- on which Georgia was criticised in the watchdog's
    last report in 2007 -- to have genuinely improved.

    But the report said many among Georgia's ethnic minorities, who make up
    some 16.7 percent of the population, still suffered unfair treatment,
    with Roma in a specially "vulnerable position."

    Meskhetian Turks, who have returned to Georgia after being deported
    in the 1940s by the former Soviet Union, often suffer "hostility"
    from the local population, the report said, urging the state to work
    to integrate them.

    Minorities including ethnic Armenians and Azerbaijanis from the south
    were also disadvantaged by their often poor command of Georgian,
    the report said, urging the state to provide bilingual teachers for
    such children.

    And children from religious minorities were allegedly exposed to
    harrassment from teachers and pupils, in a country that counts an
    overwhelming 84 percent of Orthodox Christians, the report said.

    ECRI also said reports suggested that "racism in public discourse has
    deteriorated in some aspects due to the August 2008 armed conflict
    in Georgia," which pitted Russian forces against Tbilisi.

    More broadly, it found that Georgia had to work harder to root out
    ethnic prejudice.

    "Recent reports continue to mention the existence of stereotypes,
    prejudice and misconceptions towards ethnic minorities in Georgia,
    in particular by politicians, in the media and in school textbooks,"
    it found.




    From: A. Papazian
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