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Georgia Frets Over Ethnic Tensions

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  • Georgia Frets Over Ethnic Tensions

    The Moscow Times, Russia
    July 28 2005

    Georgia Frets Over Ethnic Tensions

    By Misha Dzhindzhikhashvili

    TBILISI, Georgia -- President Mikheil Saakashvili warned Georgians
    against stoking ethnic tensions as authorities continue investigating
    the man who confessed to throwing a live grenade during a rally where
    U.S. President George W. Bush spoke.

    Speaking in a meeting with law enforcement officials Tuesday evening,
    Saakashvili scolded Georgian media for focusing on the ethnicity of
    Vladimir Arutyunyan, a Georgian citizen of Armenian ancestry who has
    admitted throwing the grenade during the May rally in Tbilisi where
    Bush and Saakashvili spoke.

    Saakashvili said media and politicians were overemphasizing
    Arutyunyan's Armenian background.

    "For me, it makes no difference what nationality the children of our
    homeland are," he said.

    "If someone doesn't love Armenians, then I am an Armenian. And if
    it's Ossetians, then I am an Ossetian," he said, "because Georgian
    patriotism is valued not by blood, but by the deeds of such people."

    Arutyunyan's lawyer said Tuesday that the man had intended to kill
    Bush, but not other Georgians.

    Georgian authorities, working with the FBI, were still trying to
    figure out Arutyunyan's exact motives. The Interior Ministry said
    that Arutyunyan, who was formally charged with terrorism on Tuesday,
    was believed to have been a member of a political party that supports
    the former leader of a region largely outside central government
    control.


    Last week, Arutyunyan was shown on local television admitting to
    throwing the grenade, which landed about 30 meters away from the
    stage where Saakashvili and Bush were standing behind a bulletproof
    barrier. It did not explode, and investigators later said it
    apparently had malfunctioned. No one was harmed in the incident.

    Saakashvili also warned against overemphasizing the fact that three
    men detained on suspicion of carrying out a Feb. 1 car bombing that
    killed three policemen and wounded 26 in the town of Gori were
    Ossetians. "Yesterday, all I heard all day on television was
    'Ossetians, Ossetians,'" he said.

    He said Ossetians had served with honor in Georgia's air force and
    its police agencies.

    Relations between Georgians and Ossetians have long been tense; South
    Ossetia broke away from central government control during a war in
    the 1990s. Tensions spiked earlier this month in a mostly ethnic
    Armenian region when a Georgian-language school was vandalized and a
    group of Georgian university students were beaten up.

    Residents of the region are angered over the planned withdrawal of a
    Russian military base, which is a mainstay of the local economy.
    Ethnic Armenians make up more than 5 percent of Georgia's 4.7 million
    people.

  • #2
    You shouldn't have included Armenian historical land in your borders if you weren't prepared to deal with what comes along...

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