Abkhazia’s Dream Of Freedom

ABKHAZIA’S DREAM OF FREEDOM
by Thomas de Waal

Open Democracy, UK
May 10 2006

Abkhazia’s case for independence from Georgia is no less compelling
than Kosovo’s from Serbia, reports Thomas de Waal from the Black
Sea territory.

A mile from the Black Sea in central Abkhazia you can see the
crimson-and-mustard striped domes of New Athos, a grand 19th-century
monastery built at the height of the czarist empire. Nearby is a
green-roofed wooden building camouflaged by the bedraggled palm trees
into the hillside, a house that you would only spot if you knew it
was there. It is Joseph Stalin’s dacha – or rather one of them,
because this small strip of enchanted coastline was his favoured
holiday destination.

When I visited in February 2006, the dacha was shut up, but you could
peer through the crystal-paned windows to see a long oblong table and
sixteen chairs in a meeting room, a cinema booth with the reels of
film still stacked there and a billiard table with dusty white balls.

The rest of the grounds had gone to ruin as surely as Stalin’s Soviet
Union and we clambered through broken walls and decades of matted
leaves to an eyrie, where the generalissimo would have taken his
evening stroll and looked out across the Black Sea.

As I wandered round this forlorn estate, I wondered what the ghost of
Stalin would make of it. Not only has his superpower fallen apart,
but even tiny Abkhazia, his favourite holiday spot, is a destitute
territory detached from Georgia and outside international jurisdiction.

Yet his affection was one of the reasons for the disaster that has
befallen Abkhazia. It was fated to be perhaps both the most privileged
and most cursed part of the Soviet Union. Privileged, because everyone
from Leon Trotsky to Mikhail Gorbachev, but especially Stalin, came
and rested here; cursed, because although the Soviet elite loved
Abkhazia it did not necessarily care about its inhabitants.

A twilight country

Abkhazia was one of those once-cosmopolitan Soviet territories all
too vulnerable to the jealousies and rivalries produced by what Terry
Martin has called “the affirmative-action empire”. In the 1920s it was
a thoroughly multi-ethnic land with trading links across the Black Sea,
a thriving tobacco industry and Turkish the lingua franca.

The Abkhaz, who are ethnic kin of the Circassians of the north
Caucasus, were the largest ethnic group but not the majority.

By 1991 the Abkhaz comprised less than one fifth of the population,
thanks in large part to mass settlement by ethnic Georgians in
the mid-Soviet period, encouraged by Stalin and his chief Georgian
henchman, Lavrenti Beria. The Abkhaz resented the Georgianification
brought by the incomers, while the Georgians resented the way the small
“titular” minority dominated all major positions in the republic.

That is all a distant memory. The Georgians are gone, driven out at
the end of the bitter war of 1992-93. Abkhazia’s population, once half
a million, is now less than half that. Sukhumi, once a city of Greek
tobacco-merchants, then of Georgian workers, is still half-ruined,
grass growing in the streets.

Abkhazia has become one of those twilight territories that exist on
the map and have a functioning government, parliament and press, but
are international pariahs, unrecognised, told by visiting dignitaries
that they are actually part of Georgia.

Yet virtually nothing is left to remind you of Georgia and the younger
generation does not even understand the Georgian language.

Instead the Russians have adopted Abkhazia and are gently annexing
it. The currency is the rouble, Moscow pays Russian pensions and gives
out Russian passports, the Russian tourists have started coming back
and Russian companies and ministries are renting out guest houses and
sanatoria. Above the resort town of Gagra stands the elegant Armenia
Sanatorium, an illustration of Abkhazia’s bizarre history. Chechen
warlord Shamil Basayev got married here in 1992 – he was part of the
broad anti-Georgian alliance of Cossacks, north Caucasians and Russian
special forces that helped the Abkhaz – and now the sanatorium is
leased out to the Russian defence ministry.

Yet it would be a mistake, one most distant observers make, to regard
Abkhazia merely as some kind of rogue Russian puppet-state. In terms
of democracy and civil society, it is no more criminal or corrupt than
any other part of the Caucasus. Its black economy is more developed
because all transactions are done in cash, but it is also a lot poorer
so there is less to steal than in Georgia, Armenia or Azerbaijan.

As for the Russians, the Abkhaz are Caucasians after all and know their
history, in which Russia has been the imperial overlord as much as
Georgia has. Most people are grateful that someone is restoring their
economy. But Abkhaz intellectuals are nagged by anxiety, worrying that
they have broken away from what the Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov
called the “little empire” of Georgia only to be swallowed up by a
resurgent nationalist Russia that seeks to use Abkhazia for its own
ends in its efforts to humiliate pro-western Georgia.

In a small but brave act of protest in October-December 2004, the
Abkhaz made it clear they were not Russian poodles. Moscow decided that
it wanted former prime minister Raul Khajimba to be the next president
and sent PR-experts, pop stars and Kremlin advisers to Abkhazia to
make sure he was safely elected. But the opposition candidate, former
energy boss Sergei Bagapsh, was declared the winner of the election
and fought a desperate battle to have the result recognised. In the
end, after weeks of failed intimidation and bullying of the Abkhaz
opposition, Moscow climbed down and Bagapsh became president with
Khajimba his vice-president.

Bagapsh was in genial form when I visited him. I believed him when he
said he bore no grudge against the Russian officials who had tried
to destroy him but now greeted him amiably as though nothing had
happened. Bigger things are on his mind. He wanted to talk about Kosovo
and its status talks, which are expected to lead to full independence.

President Vladimir Putin had deftly stirred things up on 31 January
2006 when he said at a Kremlin press conference: “If someone believes
that Kosovo should be granted full independence as a state, then why
should we deny it to the Abkhaz and the South Ossetians?”

Bagapsh argued fiercely that where Kosovo should lead, Abkhazia
should follow. Bagapsh said: “If the issue of Kosovo is settled (in
favour of independence) let’s say, and not the issue of Abkhazia,
that is a policy purely of double standards.”

It is an argument to which I am quite sympathetic. The Abkhaz are
entitled to look around and see double standards: that the west
wants to “reward” Kosovo for its loyalty after the Nato intervention
against Slobodan Milosevic, while retaining a soft spot for Georgia
by insisting that its territorial integrity is inviolable. Yet if you
were on the receiving end of Georgian armed thugs threatening your
existence rather than Serbian armed thugs, that distinction seems
rather arbitrary. The two cases are certainly not so far apart to be
judged by entirely different standards.

That applies too to the counter-argument that Serbs or Georgians
might wish to make. There is also the matter of those refugees. The
Serbs comprised a far smaller proportion of the population of pre-war
Kosovo. Thousands of them have left. They are the ones who have the
right to set the Kosovo government an exam on whether it is fit to
become a proper sovereign state that looks after its minorities.

Sukhumi waits

In Abkhazia that exam would be even harder. True, some 40,000 Georgians
have returned to the southern district of Gali inside Abkhazia. But
they live a precarious existence there, preyed on by militias and
gangsters – Georgian as well as Abkhaz – and vulnerable to immediate
expulsion should the Georgian-Abkhaz peace process break down.

What about the remaining Georgians, I asked Bagapsh, estimated to be
up to a quarter of a million and comprising half Abkhazia’s pre-war
population? If you followed the Kosovo model to its logical conclusion,
then they should be allowed full right of return.

Naturally, the president replied that Abkhazia should get its
independence first, then invite the Georgians back. But he did at least
concede that “there are more obligations sometimes than privileges”
in being a sovereign state and that it was a tricky process.

One thing is certain: there is something deeply unsatisfactory
about the intellectual framework around the “frozen conflicts” of
the Caucasus – Abkhazia, South Ossetia and Nagorno-Karabakh. The
unrecognised separatist territories are told that the Soviet
borders are inviolable and that in effect any moves they may make to
democratise themselves are irrelevant. The Kosovo process is useful
because it challenges those assumptions. Surely, now that the precedent
has been set, the debate has to be about democracy and minority rights
more than about territorial integrity.

I remembered what a Nagorno-Karabakh Armenian had said to me,
a question I found unanswerable at the time. “So we were inside
Azerbaijan for seventy years. How many years do we have to spend
outside Azerbaijan for the world to recognise that we have left them
behind for good – twenty, thirty, seventy?”

If the Abkhaz can put together a democratic case for greater
recognition by the outside world, I for one will be glad. And if Stalin
spins a little more in his grave on Red Square, so much the better.

Thomas de Waal is Caucasus editor of the Institute for War & Peace
Reporting in London. He is co-author (with Carlotta Gall) of Chechnya:
Calamity in the Caucasus (New York University Press, 1998) and author
of Black Garden: Armenia and Azerbaijan through peace and war (New
York University Press, 2003)

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