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Georgia-Russia Conflict: Where Are The People?
By Angelika Arutyunova
Program Officer for Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States
For the past month, women in Georgia who were displaced from
Abkhazia during the 1993 conflict have witnessed history moving
backwards; everything they lived through 15 years ago is repeating
itself. These women are now hosting a new flood of displaced civilians
from Abkhazia and South Ossetia after Russia's aggression in those
regions, as well as within the Georgian territories that Russian forces
have occupied since the invasion. In Tbilisi alone, there are more than
500 camps for internally displaced people, many of them women and
children living with shortages of food and medical supplies.
Georgians
today hardly feel supportive of their president, Mikheil Saakashvili,
who, in a foolish attempt to regain control over South Ossetia, turn its full military might
Russia to drop its peacekeeping mission in the region and to pushing
Georgian troops out of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, and then to
occupying much of Georgia. The Russians bombed numerous strategic and
civilian targets in Georgia, destroying infrastructure resulting in
shortages of food, fuel, and medicine.
People are in despair;
they are angry at Russia for its aggression and at their own government
for provoking this uneven conflict. People of different nationalities
and ethnicities have been living in this region side by side for
centuries, sharing customs, traditions, bread and wine, and mutual
respect for each another's cultures and languages. But, going back to
the Russian, British, and Ottoman Empires that once battled here, they
have been continually exploited by politicians and generals.
Women
and children suffer the most in times of conflict. Add to this
centuries-old patriarchal traditions, 15-year-old post-war traumas, a
20-year economic crisis, and current Russian aggression, and you may
begin to grasp what women in South Ossetia, Abkhazia, and Georgia are
enduring these days.
Besides the general devastation that
modern warfare brings, impoverished and angry Russian soldiers were
wreaking havoc on civilians by stealing belongings left behind and
raping women. In addition, lawlessness was enticing bandits to cross
the border and vandalise and rob properties
left by fleeing refugees. News reports and "analysis" by
state-controlled channels in both Russia and Georgia that promote
negative images of "the enemy" serve only to widen the gap between
ethnic groups.
Over the past month, concerned citizens in both
Russia and Georgia have started to make attempts to build alliances and
reach out to each other outside of the government-controlled media and
structures. There have been action calls and statements circulated on
the web calling on the people of the region to unite and not allow
governments to build bigger walls between them.
Despite
government propaganda, the region's people must remember that Russians
are not superior to Georgians, Georgians to Ossetians or Abkhazians,
and so on. We need to stop these territorial battles based on national
pride and desire to control and rule. Saakashvili must be pressured to
abandon his effort to wield full control over Abkhazia and South
Ossetia. At the same time, the Russian government must be pressured to
pull out of the Caucasus and let people there decide their future for
themselves.
Now is the time for Georgian, Russian, Abkazian,
and Ossetian civilians who are bearing the brunt of the conflict to
come together to stop imperial chess games that kill thousands of
people and leave thousands more displaced and emotionally wounded. It
is time to help civil society in this area build a world where peace,
not warfare, is the rule.
Women's rights activists in the
region should not fall into a brainwashing trap of nationalism and
territorial disputes, becoming another tool in the hands of
politicians. They should demonstrate to their governments that they
will not succumb to divisive ideology.
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