EURASIA INSIGHT
GEORGIA TACKLES CHECHEN CONUNDRUM
Daria Solovieva: 3/11/04
Georgian
President Mikheil Saakashvili
appears determined to crack Georgia’s Chechen conundrum. His efforts so
far, however, have angered many, while leaving few satisfied.
Chechen
separatists remain active in Chechnya. Raids in the war-ravaged region
March 10-11 left at least eight Russian soldiers and local police officers
dead, according to media reports. During the 24-hour span Chechen separatists
carried out up to 19 separate attacks against government facilities in the
region.
The
presence of Chechen refugees in Georgia, mainly in the Pankisi
Gorge near Georgia’s frontier with Chechnya, has been a major source of
friction between Moscow and Tbilisi in recent years. Russian authorities have long
charged that Chechen militants have taken advantage of Georgia’s political chaos to utilize the Pankisi Gorge as a safe haven. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
archive]. Moscow also assailed former Georgian
leader Eduard Shevardnadze for tolerating the Chechen
separatist presence in Georgia. [For background information see the Eurasia Insight archive].
Shortly
after taking office in late January, Saakashvili
characterized Shevardnadze’s lack of action on the Chechen separatist question
as "dangerous policy," and pledged to tighten border controls along
the Georgian-Russian frontier.
During
Saakashvili’s early February visit to Moscow, the Georgian president vowed to
work with Russian leaders to improve security along the two countries’ shared
frontier, offering to form joint military patrols. He also indicated he would
step up efforts to extradite suspected Islamic militants. Saakashvili
reportedly admitted to Russian officials that Shevardnadze’s administration had
turned a blind eye to Chechen separatist activity in the Pankisi
Gorge, an area that has long had a reputation for lawlessness. [For background see the Eurasia
Insight archive].
After
returning to Georgia, Saakashvili
told reporters on February 18 that the country needed to confront the threat of
"Wahabbism" – a term that is commonly
interchangeable in the parlance of the Commonwealth of Independent States with
Islamic radicalism. He promised to undertake "severe actions" to
drive Islamic radicals out of Georgia. "They should not expect any
compromise on our part," the Georgian president said.
Mysterious
actions followed Saakashvili’s tough words. On
February 19, Russian authorities detained two Chechens – Beqkhan
Mulkoyev and Hussein Alkhanov
– at the Georgian-Russian border three days after the duo’s unexplained
disappearance in Tbilisi, Caucasus Press reported. Russian officials
said Mulkoyev and Alkhanov
were wanted on an Interpol warrant for suspected terrorist activity. The pair
was among a group of 13 Chechens who had been detained in 2002 on suspicion of
entering Georgia illegally. Just under two weeks
before being taken into custody by Russian authorities, Mulkoyev
and Alkhanov had been acquitted by a Tbilisi court of the illegal border-crossing
charge.
Georgian
officials denied any involvement in either the disappearance of the two
Chechens, or their subsequent arrest. But a leader of the Chechen community in
Georgia, Khizri Aldamov,
disputed the Georgian official account. "No one would believe that they [Mulkoyev and Alkhanov] went to
the Russian border themselves," Aldamov told the
Civil Georgia web site. "They did not intend to leave Georgia."
In
moving to crack down on suspected Islamic radicals, Saakashvili
is striving to accomplish several political aims in one stroke: If successful,
the crackdown would go a long way towards reestablishing
central authority in the Pankisi Gorge; it also would
serve to demonstrate that Saakashvili’s
administration is serious about cooperating with Russia, thus raising the odds
that solutions could be found to a host of bilateral problems, including
Abkhazia’s political status; and it would reassure the United States on
Georgia’s commitment to fight international terrorism.
The
shift in Georgian government policy has alarmed thousands of Chechen refugees
in Georgia, most of whom are
concentrated in the Pankisi Gorge. It also has caused
concern among Kists, ethnic Chechens who are
indigenous to the Pankisi Gorge. [For background see
the Eurasia Insight archive]. Some observers suggest the crackdown could result
in violations of the civil rights of both refugees and local residents.
According to Civil Georgia, many Chechen refugees worry that Georgian-Russian
cooperation "might threaten their security."
One
Chechen advocate in Georgia, Dzhokola Acheshvili, said the Georgian government’s campaign was not
distinguishing between radicals and mainstream believers of Islam. He went on
to suggest there was a religious motive to the crackdown, in which Saakashvili, as leader of Christian Georgia, was seeking to
curb the practice of Islam in the country: "The Georgian president has
said he is beginning a struggle against so-called ‘Wahabbism,’"
Acheshvili said in a statement posted on the Chechen
web site Kavkaz-Tsentr on February 19. "In fact,
this is nothing other than a struggle against Islam."
Acheshvili accused Saakashvili
of trying to "isolate Kist children" from their cultural heritage,
and alleged that authorities had condoned attacks against Islamic cutural sites in Pankisi,
including the desecration of a mosque in Duisi, the
regional center. "The fact that Saakashvili has decided to attack religion will bring
nothing good to Georgian society," Acheshvili
added.
Other
reports posted by Kavkaz Tsentr
have made vague references to possible retaliation if what it portrays as the
harassment of Chechen refugees does not cease. "Chechens are not
responsible for future problems in relations that most probably could
arise," said a March 7 commentary on the arrest of an 18-year-old Chechen
on the Georgian-Azerbaijani border.
While
Saakashvili’s crackdown on Islamic militants has
unsettled refugees in Georgia, it apparently has not satisfied
some influential members of Russia’s government. On March 6, Russian Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov complained in an interview with the French newspaper
Figaro that separatists are continuing to use Georgian territory as a safe
haven. Ivanov said Islamic militants from outside the
former Soviet
Union
continued to use Georgia as a transit point on their way to
fight in Chechnya.
"Neither
the [Georgian] army nor the police take any measures," Ivanov
said. "We have eliminated dozens of foreign terrorists, including
nationals from NATO member-states, mainly Turkey. Georgian visas have always been
found in their passports." According to a British Broadcasting Corporation
report March 9, Russian officials had found documentation on separatists killed
in action that indicates some Islamic militants are being recruited in Britain.
Saakashvili vigorously denied Ivanov’s
allegations, according to an Itar-Tass report March
8. Saakashvili reiterated Georgia’s offer to conduct joint patrols
with Russia in an attempt to seal the Georgian-Russian
border. "Nothing has been done" by Moscow to follow up on the Georgian offer,
Saakashvili said.
Editor’s Note:
Daria Solovieva is an
editorial associate at EurasiaNet. She is a political
science major at Bard College. She is at work on a senior thesis
that examines the impact of the Chechen conflict on Russian foreign policy.
http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/insight/articles/eav031104.shtml