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Javakhk: A Test For Georgian Democracy

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  • Javakhk: A Test For Georgian Democracy

    JAVAKHK: A TEST FOR GEORGIAN DEMOCRACY

    http://asbarez.com/110823/javakhk-a-test-for-georgian-democracy/
    Monday, June 24th, 2013

    The old Armenian University in Akhalkalak

    BY VARANT MEGUERDITCHIAN

    The victory of opposition Georgian Dream Party leader Prime Minister
    Bidzina Ivanishvili at the October 2012 Georgian Parliamentary
    elections demonstrated the public's overwhelming rejection of the
    decade-long domination of Georgian politics by President Mikeil
    Saakashvili and his United National Movement Party.

    In the preceding two years constitutional amendments were enacted that
    would gradually shift Georgian political power from the President
    to the Prime Minister. This ensured that the period of transition
    in which Georgia finds itself today is marked by a power struggle
    between the Presidency of Saakashvili and the Prime Ministership of
    Ivanishvili. Georgia's numerous native ethnic minorities have been
    impacted by this power struggle and the Armenians of Javakhk are
    no different.

    With him, Ivanishvili brought hope for reform and was warmly welcomed
    by the Armenians of Javakhk. Just months later that hope turned to
    promise, when in January 2013, during a visit to Armenia Ivanishvili
    declared that the "ball is now in my court" to fulfil the election
    promises and address the requests of the Javakhk Armenians which were
    largely ignored during the dominance of the Saakashvili leadership.

    Now, nine months on from his election victory what have these hopes
    and promises meant, on the ground, for the Armenians of Javakhk?

    Varant Meguerditchian

    The release of activists Vahan Chakhalyan and Artur Poghosyan
    demonstrated both Ivanishvili's power to make decisions and his intent
    to bring about change. Both activists had been vocal but peaceful
    advocates of the rights of Javakhk Armenians and had been arrested on
    dubious charges. Ivanishvili also removed a number of Saakashvili's
    personnel from key Javakhk regional government positions replacing
    them with his own.

    Beyond these actions, Ivanishvili has also made a series of promises to
    be implemented in the future. These have included the promise to fund a
    historical commission to determine the origins of churches in Javakhk
    and, more broadly, in Georgia, the ownership of which is disputed by
    the Georgian Orthodox and Armenian Apostolic Church authorities. There
    are promises also for improvements in the sphere of education for
    the Armenians of Javakhk. Additional hours for teaching the Armenian
    language, the addition of Armenian history into the school curriculum
    and granting approval for the opening of a new Armenian University
    campus in Georgia are just some of the initiatives around which there
    is now serious speculation and hope. A review is underway to address
    the unfair dismissal of Armenian teachers from schools in the Javakhk
    region for their perceived inability or unwillingness to accept the
    changes to Armenian schooling implemented by Saakashvili. There is
    even talk of compensation for those affected.

    The mood that has been created by the leadership of Ivanishvili
    has given the Javakhk Armenians some necessary reprieve. Today,
    the Armenians of Javakhk are unafraid of 'offending' the Georgian
    government, and they more liberally exercise the freedoms of assembly
    and expression. So much so that based on the various European
    minority rights charters - including the Framework Convention for
    the Protection of National Minorities and the European Charter for
    Regional or Minority Languages - the Akhalkalak Regional Council (ARC)
    resolved to apply to the Georgian government for the Armenian language
    to be granted the status of an official regional language in Javakhk.

    But the Armenians of Javakhk remain cautious. The power struggle
    between Saakashvili and Ivanishvili has thus far made the ARC reluctant
    to formally apply for Armenian language rights.

    Saakashvili's refusal to acknowledge the needs of ethnic minorities
    still has some influence over political decision-making in Georgia -
    even if only to prevent further Armenian requests being fulfilled by
    Ivanishvili. Aside from the promises for improvement to education
    and religious rights, the situation largely remains the same. For
    example, Armenians who voice the concerns of the Javakhk population
    are still briefly interviewed at the Georgia-Armenia border upon
    entry to Georgia.

    There is some hope that at the upcoming Georgian Presidential elections
    in October Giorgi Margvelashvili of Ivanishvili's Georgia Dream
    coalition will defeat Saakashvili's United National Movement. If so,
    Ivanishvili will be well-placed to implement some of these pledges for
    reform. Margvelashvili is the current Georgian Education Minister in
    Ivanishvili's cabinet under whom many of the promises for improving
    the educational rights of Javakhk Armenians have been made.

    According to the Global Democracy Ranking Index Georgia is ranked as
    the 58th most democratic nation in the world. While Georgia's democracy
    ranking is well above that of its Caucasus neighbours Armenia (89th)
    and Azerbaijan (unranked) due to its efforts to reduce corruption,
    Georgia has yet to prove its genuine democratic credentials. Given
    the ethno-linguistic make-up of the Georgian state, with its Svan,
    Mskhetian, Mingrelian, Laz, Ossetian, Adjarian, Abkhaz, Armenian and
    other minority populations, one of the greatest measures of Georgian
    democracy will be its treatment of ethnic minorities.

    Time will tell whether there will be genuine reform or whether the
    Armenians of Javakhk are just a pawn in the power struggle between
    Saakashvili and Ivanishvili. The outcome of the Georgian Presidential
    elections in October 2013, and the ensuing policies of whichever
    political force assumes power thereafter, will be a major determining
    factor of the immediate fate of the Armenians of Javakhk.

    Varant Meguerditchian is the former Executive Director and President of
    the Armenian National Committee of Australia. He currently works as a
    government relations professional in Sydney. He holds undergraduate
    and graduate degrees in politics and business administration and
    is currently completing his second Master's degree in International
    Relations.

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