Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Tbilisi: Georgian President says Armenian activist's release increas

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

  • Tbilisi: Georgian President says Armenian activist's release increas

    Rustavi-2 TV, Georgia
    Jan 28 2013

    Georgian President says Armenian activist's release increases separatism risk


    Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili has once again criticized the
    government of Prime Minister Bidzina Ivanishvili over the release from
    prison of ethnic Armenian activist Vahagn Chakhalyan.

    In an address to displaced persons from Abkhazia at his Tbilisi
    residence on 28 January, Saakashvili drew several historical parallels
    and warned that in the ethnic Armenian-populated Javakheti region,
    people like Chakhalyan diminish locals' sense of being part of the
    Georgian state.

    In his remarks, part of which was broadcast by Rustavi-2 TV, he said:
    "Of course, the presence or absence of one person in prison may not be
    historically decisive, but today this is a problem. If anyone had
    caught and imprisoned [Abkhaz separatist leader] Vladislav Ardzinba
    somewhere, Abkhazia would not have happened the way it did. Had Torez
    Kulumbegov and Alan Chochiyev, the leaders of Adamon Nykhas
    [organization advocating South Ossetia's secession from Georgia in the
    early 1990s] not been released, what happened in Tskhinvali would not
    have happened.

    "They [Georgian government] say 'we have nothing to do with it; they
    were amnestied'. Sorry, but that amnesty was an amnesty approved by
    the Georgian parliamentary majority. And we talked about it a lot
    [before it was passed] without making any noise. They cannot say they
    did not know. They knew very well. And I spoke to them specifically
    about this, telling them not to release Shrilnikov and his brethren
    [Russian citizens convicted of spying for Russia], and not to release
    Chakhalyan. The rest of the amnesty [amnestied prisoners] is a problem
    - burgled cottages, booths and shops are a clear confirmation of this
    - but it is a problem that can be dealt with. And now they are saying:
    'No big deal, if someone raises their voice, we will put him back in'.
    You cannot just put him back in.

    "It was a long time ago when not a single Georgian policeman could
    enter Javakheti. That was before the rose revolution. It took to me
    and my friends two years to establish order there after the rose
    revolution. Chakhalyan says that he never had any problems before
    that, that it was only Saakashvili who caused him problems. Of course
    he did not have any problems before that. Before that, not a single
    Georgian soldier, not a single Georgian policeman, not a single
    representative of Georgian power could go there. So of course he did
    not have any problems. It [Javakheti] was completely controlled by the
    Russians. It was in the Russians' hands.

    "The Russian army's new doctrine - they published it two days ago - is
    that Russia's new wars are to be based on local protest potential. So,
    first local people need to come out and express protest and then they
    come in. In 1920 we [Georgian Democratic Republic 1918-21] released
    Russian spies on an amnesty deal that we signed. We released Lavrenti
    Beria, we released [Georgian Bolshevik] Pilipe Makharadze and other
    spies which the first republic had imprisoned. Then in 1921, one of
    the ethnic minority groups [Ossetians] supposedly revolted and on that
    basis the 11th [Bolshevik] army came in with Georgians at its helm.

    "What message are we sending to the Georgians who are teaching
    Georgian there by releasing Chakhalyan? What message are sending to
    the local ethnic Armenian citizens who have come to believe in the
    Georgian state and in recent years followed us in believing that their
    future is in Georgia? What are we telling them? Now this bandit will
    go there and terrorize those who are on the side of the Georgian
    state. And who will protect them?

    "I want to say that we must indeed be very careful. The Georgian state
    is very young, as we have been creating it over the past nine years.
    The main advantage that our citizens have gained in recent years in
    Akhalkalaki [major city in Javakheti] is the fact that we are living
    in a state, including in regard to many of their neighbours: that we
    are living in a great place. This could disappear too. I do not want
    this sense of statehood to disappear."

    [Translated from Georgian]

Working...
X