Russian Parliament Recommends Recognition of
Abkhazia and South Ossetia Independence
Russia Today, August 26, 2008, 0:50
Duma vote deals blow to Georgia
Both houses of the Russian parliament have unanimously adopted an
appeal to President Dmitry Medvedev to recognise the independence of
Abkhazia and South Ossetia. However, Georgia has repeatedly said it will
never surrender its territories.
MPs gathered for special emergency sessions to debate the issue of the
unrecognised states.
The Federation Council, the upper chamber, has also agreed that
additional forces of Russian peacekeepers will be deployed in the
conflict areas where the two breakaway republics border Georgia.
The lower chamber, the State Duma, meanwhile, has called on
international parliamentary organisations and parliaments of the
UN-member countries to recognise the independence of Abkhazia and South
Ossetia.
As the emergency session of the Federation Council began in Moscow, the
presidents of the two breakaway republics have once again said they will
never agree to remain within Georgia.
In his speech, the President of South Ossetia, Eduard Kokoity, said that
both unrecognised states have more right to independence than Kosovo.
“As President of South Ossetia and on behalf of the South Ossetian
parliament and its people, with all gratitude to the President of the
Russian Federation I once again call for the recognition of South
Ossetia as an independent state,” he said before the senators.
Abkhazian President Sergey Bagapsh, for his part, said neither Abkhazia
nor South Ossetia will live as one state with Georgia.
In his address the Speaker of the Duma, Boris Gryzlov, called Georgia's
action a case of genocide and compared it to the aggression of Nazi
Germany against the Soviet Union.
Even if Russia recognises Abkhazia and South Ossetia, the entire process
will take a long time. There will be a need to decide what form their
independence will take.
But if NATO makes a strong push to bring Georgia into the alliance,
Russia will recognise both of them instantaneously, says
RT’s
political commentator Peter Lavelle.
Hard road to independence
South Ossetia, which borders Russia in the south Caucasus, and Abkhazia
on the Black Sea had previously attempted to break away from Georgia
following referendums which were overwhelmingly in favour of
independence. The results were ignored by Tbilisi, which claimed the
ethnic Georgians forced to flee the regions were not consulted. The
recent conflict in South Ossetia has added further urgency to the
demands for self-determination.
The roots of the current discord can be traced back to the divide and
conquer policies of Joseph Stalin - himself half Georgian, half Ossetian.
Before the 1917 revolution, the ethnic groups of the Caucasus all lived
as separate subjects of the Russian empire. However, with the Bolsheviks
came the redrawing of the map, with both South Ossetia and Abkhazia
becoming parts of Georgia.
When the Soviet Union collapsed, the then Georgian leader Zviad
Gamsakhurdia advocated a nationalist "Georgia for the Georgians" policy,
re-opening old wounds. Two military conflicts followed, leaving
thousands dead and forcing many more to flee the conflict zones.
The ceasefire in the early 1990s brought de-facto independence to both
regions with the shaky truce maintained by peacekeeping forces of mainly
Russian troops.
Russia has never recognised the independence of either republic,
although Georgia has repeatedly accused Moscow of trying to annex its
territory.
Since becoming president in 2004, Mikhail Saakashvili has pledged to
bring his country closer to the West, which has also motivated his drive
to end the territorial disputes.
Ossetians and Georgians have lived side by side for centuries. The two
groups share Soviet history and the Orthodox Christian religion and
intermarriage is common. But the ties that once bound their cultures
have been severely damaged in the trauma of the recent fighting.
Kosovo's self-declared independence in February, too, has boosted these
regions' ambitions.
Most Abkhazians and South Ossetians carry Russian passports and the only
valid currency is the Russian rouble. In addition, both self-declared
republics have presidents, flags, national anthems, armies and Moscow’s
support.
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