Georgia: Parliament Considers Meskhetian Turk Repatriation Plan

GEORGIA: PARLIAMENT CONSIDERS MESKHETIAN TURK REPATRIATION PLAN
Paul Rimple

EurasiaNet, NY
June 28 2007

After several false starts, Georgia is on the verge of approving a
plan that would permit the repatriation of thousands of Meskhetian
Turks. Implementation of the plan would mark a major step in Georgia’s
democratization process, but some opposition politicians warn that
the legislation is vague and could lead to unpleasant surprises for
the Georgian government.

In 1944, tens of thousands of Meskhetian Turks were deported en masse
by Stalin from the Samtskhe-Javakheti region of southwest Georgia
to Central Asia for alleged security reasons. In 1989, a similar
number fled Uzbekistan after being targeted during an outbreak of
violence in the Ferghana Valley. Many have since received refugee
status and have immigrated to the West. Those who remain in Central
Asia tend to suffer from discrimination, according to international
human rights monitoring.

When Georgia joined the Council of Europe (CoE) in 1999, the country
committed itself to a 12-year plan to repatriate and integrate the
deportees. Until now, though, the government has not made a serious
move toward fulfilling that obligation. A draft law to facilitate
the group’s return to Georgia was approved on the second reading in
parliament on June 27 by a vote of 101 to 2. A final vote is scheduled
for June 29.

The draft law gives Meskhetian Turks one year (between January 1 and
December 31, 2008) to go to Georgian consulates to register their
intention to return to Georgia. The government maintains that this
policy will allow authorities to determine the number of people
willing to return and to plan the pace of the repatriation process.

The law does not specify where the returnees are expected to live,
and does not provide for financial assistance. The second reading of
the bill included a stipulation that returnees must include a property
declaration when they register for repatriation.

A representative of the Council of Europe in Tbilisi declined to
comment on the draft law, yet in a June 13 interview with the online
news service Civil.ge, one of the bill’s co-authors indicated that a
desire to comply with both Council of Europe and North Atlantic Treaty
Organization requirements became "a reason to accelerate the process."

Although tantalizingly close to passage, some experts believe the
repatriation bill, due to its sensitive nature, could still stumble
over disagreement on details. Considerable debate, for example,
still surrounds the question of how many Meskhetian Turks might opt
to return to Georgia.

European Center for Minority Issues (ECMI) Regional Representative
Tom Trier believes the one-year time limit could make for inaccurate
numbers if many Meskhetian Turks opt to register just to cover
themselves, leaving the real decision for later. That could leave the
government scrambling for an adequate response. For parliamentarian
Zviad Dzidziguri of the Conservative Party, which has opposed the
bill, the lack of clarity on this count poses a threat to national
security. "[T]his is treacherous because the bill doesn’t envisage
possible complications if, say, 100,000 repatriates want Georgian
citizenship," he said on Imedi television on June 14.

Fellow Conservative Party parliamentarian Kakha Kuklava worries that
the return of Meskhetian Turks to Samtskhe-Javakheti, a predominantly
ethnic Armenian region that borders on Turkey, risks triggering a
fresh outbreak of regional separatism. Local tensions ran high in
the early 1990s when Meskhetian Turks who identified themselves as
ethnic Georgians returned to the region.

"We have a bad experience with minorities in Georgia," said Kuklava.

"After independence, Russia used our minorities against us [in the
breakaway pro-Russia regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia] and they
plan to make another conflict in Javakheti."

That interpretation of Russia’s role is common among politicians and
ordinary residents alike. Kukava, however, also charges that Turkey and
pan-Turkic organizations could help Meskhetian Turks claim independence
"in three to five years" if they are invited to return.

Such a scenario is based on the assumption that Meskhetian Turks are,
in fact, ethnic Turks. The matter of the Meskhetians Turkishness has
been a charged debate for Georgians, many of whom remember Ottoman
Turkey’s centuries-long domination of western and southwestern
Georgia. Official Georgian accounts claim that Meskhetians are
Georgians who converted to Islam during Ottoman Turkey’s control
of Samtskhe-Javakheti. These accounts do not refer to the group as
"Turks." The counter-argument maintained by many deportees is that
their ancestors were Turks who settled in the Samtskhe-Javekheti
region in the 5th century. The term, "Meskhetian Turk" was used by
Soviet officials to describe the community, though it is rarely used by
group members themselves, who usually refer to themselves as "Ashika"
or "Akhaltsikhe" Turks, a reference to the region’s capital city.

The ECMI’s Trier calls the ethnicity debate "irrelevant" to the
current repatriation issue. The Conservative Party’s Kakha Kukava,
however, has proposed that parliament establish a panel of experts
to determine whether "we are dealing with Turkish, Tatar and Kurdish
ethnic groups who were aggressively disposed towards the Georgian state
from the start," Imedi Television reported the politician as saying.

Meanwhile, in the deportees’ homeland itself, feelings are mixed.

Former Samstkhe-Javakheti Deputy Governor Armen Armirkhanian commented
that the local Armenian population is not particularly eager to
live with a people with whom they share many historical differences,
yet noted that the feeling is not universal.

In the end, an influx of fresh residents to one of Georgia’s most
economically depressed regions may prove the biggest challenge,
added Armirikhanian. "I can’t say what kind of problems will emerge
as a result of this decision, but competing for work in an area with
very little opportunities will be a real dilemma," he said.

Editor’s Note: Paul Rimple is a freelance reporter based in Tbilisi.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Emil Lazarian

“I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS