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1989 Sukhumi riots

The Sukhumi riot was a riot in Sukhumi, Abkhaz Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic, Soviet Union, in July 1989, triggered by an increasing inter-ethnic tensions between the Abkhaz and Georgian communities and followed by several days of street fighting and civil unrest in Sukhumi and throughout Abkhazia.

1989 Sukhumi riots
Part of Georgian-Abkhaz conflict and Dissolution of the Soviet Union
DateJuly 1989
Location
43°00′12″N 41°00′55″E / 43.00333°N 41.01528°E / 43.00333; 41.01528
Caused byOpening of a Tbilisi State University branch in Sukhumi
MethodsRioting, street fighting, looting, siege
Parties
Abkhaz civilians
Georgian civilians
Soviet police
Casualties
Death(s)18
Injuries448

The riots started as an Abkhaz protest against opening of a branch of Tbilisi State University in Sukhumi, and concluded with looting of the Georgian school which was expected to house the new university on 16 July 1989. The ensuing violence quickly degenerated into a large-scale inter-ethnic confrontation. By the time when the Soviet army managed to temporarily bring the situation under control, the riots resulted in at least 18 dead and 448 injured, mostly Georgians. The first case of inter-ethnic violence in Georgia, it effectively marked the start of the Georgian-Abkhaz conflict.

Background edit

Abkhazia, being part of medieval Kingdom of Georgia and western Georgian Kingdom of Imereti, joined the Georgia in modern times as recently as 1918 as an autonomous entity.[1] After Soviet annexation of Georgia, from 1921 until 1931, Abkhazia was a quasi-independent Soviet republic, the Socialist Soviet Republic of Abkhazia (SSR Abkhazia), united with the Georgian SSR in a special treaty status but not fully subservient. This arrangement ended when the SSR Abkhazia was downgraded into the Abkhaz ASSR and fully under the control of the Georgian SSR.[2]

In 1956, Georgians protested a policy of de-stalinization of Nikita Khrushchev, inflamed by sarcastic and bitter manner in which Khrushchev emphasized Stalin's Georgian character.[3] Thus, Stalin's denigration was seen as a symbol for the mistreatment of Georgian national consciousness at the hands of the Soviet rulers.[4] The protests were violently dispersed by the Soviet authorities, with estimates of the number of casualties ranging from several dozens to several hundred.[4][5] The separatist elements in Abkhazia capitalized on these circumstances to win over the support of the Soviet government and launched counter-protests in 1957, including against autonomous status of Abkhazia within Georgia. Anti-Georgian telegrams, letters and statements were sent to the central Soviet authorities in Moscow by the Abkhaz, while the Georgian inscriptions in Abkhazia were destroyed or falsified.[6] The Soviet government responded by granting significant privilages to the Abkhaz. These protests were repeated again in 1967, and in 1978, the latter capitalizing on embarrassment faced by the Soviet government when it had to concede to the Georgian protesters who thus successfully defended the constitutional status of Georgian language in the Georgian SSR.[7] Therefore, each time the Abkhaz protests resulted in the Soviet government favoring the Abkhaz and granting ethnic-based privilages in the Abkhaz SSR. These privilages included the upgrading of the Sukhum Pedagogical Institute into a full university, Abkhaz State University, but also wide over-representation of the Abkhaz in the nomenklatura.[8][9]

As the Georgian dissidents began to campaign for the Georgian independence and mobilized large number of protesters in the late 1980s, on 17 June 1988, an 87-page document, known as the 'Abkhazian Letter', was sent to Mikhail Gorbachev and the rest of the Soviet leadership. Signed by 60 leading Abkhaz Communists, it outlined "the grievances the Abkhaz felt", and argued that despite the concessions of 1978, autonomy had largely been ignored in the region. Thus, it asked for Abkhazia to be removed from the Georgian SSR, and to be "restored as a full Soviet republic, akin to the SSR Abkhazia".[10]

Further issues occurred on 18 March 1989. Around 37,000 people met at the village of Lykhny, a traditional meeting spot for the Abkhaz, and signed what became known as the Lykhny Declaration. It once again called for Abkhazia to become a separate republic like it was between 1921 and 1931. The Declaration, which unlike the prior 'Abkhazian Letter' was made public immediately saw mass opposition demonstrations from the Georgian community in Abkhazia.[11] The protests climaxed in the Georgian capital of Tbilisi and evolved into a major anti-Soviet and pro-independence rally on 9 April 1989, which was violently dispersed by Soviet Interior Ministry troops, resulting in the deaths of at least nineteen, mostly young women, and the injury of hundreds of demonstrators.[12] At a plenum of the Georgian central committee the following day the Communist party first secretary, Jumber Patiashvili, resigned and was replaced by the former head of the Georgian KGB, Givi Gumbaridze.[13] The 9 April tragedy removed the last vestiges of credibility from the Soviet regime in Georgia and pushed many Georgians into radical opposition to the Soviet Union, and exacerbated ethnic tensions between Georgians and other groups, in particular the Abkhaz and Ossetians.[14]

The university controversy edit

 
The status of Abkhazian State University, pictured here in 2013, was the source of the riots.

The issue of a university had always been very sensitive in Abkhazia. Sukhumi State University was established in 1978 as a part of the concessions towards the Abkhaz secessionist demands, which in its turn was triggered by the Georgian national mobilization in defense of their language and culture. The university had three sectors: Abkhaz, Georgian, and Russian.[15] However, Georgian students repeatedly complained of discrimination at the hands of their Abkhaz and Russian lectors and administration.[16] In the aftermath of the 9 April events, Georgian students at Sukhumi State University started a hunger strike, calling for the Georgian sector of the university to be transformed into a branch of Tbilisi State University, and in effect controlled by Georgians and not Abkhaz.[17] Joined by students and faculty from the Subtropical Institute, this was part of a campaign started by ethnic Georgians in Abkhazia for greater cultural separation, and more clear division between the two ethnic groups. Aware it would cause unrest in Abkhazia, the authorities approved the measure on 14 May.[18] In response Abkhaz organized a sit-in. The Supreme Soviet in Moscow also launched a commission, which ruled that the Georgians had no authority to establish the university, as that was solely under its purview.[19] They concluded that a region the size of Abkhazia had no need for two universities.[20]

The riots edit

Despite the ruling against the legality of the university, entrance exams were scheduled for 15 July.[21] Attempts by Abkhaz to photograph the crowds of Georgians congregated in the city is said to have started the violence.[22][21] By 7:00pm the university was under attack.[22] Late on 16 July, a crowd of five thousand Abkhaz, many of whom were armed, surged into the building. Several members of the Georgian exam commission were beaten up, and the school was looted.[23]

This set off a chain of events that produced further casualties and destruction as the both sides engaged in armed fighting for several days to come. That evening, Abkhaz and Georgians began mobilizing all over Abkhazia and western Georgia. Svans, an ethnic Georgian subgroup from northeastern Abkhazia, and Abkhaz from the town of Tkvarcheli in Abkhazia clashed in a shootout that lasted all night and intermittently for several days afterward.[19] Meanwhile, up to 25,000 Georgians from western Georgia, and the predominantly Georgian Gali district in southern Abkhazia, gathered near Ochamchire.[24] Soviet Interior Ministry troops were sent in to restore order, and by 17 July the violence had largely dissipated.[25]

Aftermath edit

The July events in Abkhazia left at least 18 dead and 448 injured, of whom, according to official accounts, 302 were Georgians.[26] It also marked the first case of inter-ethnic violence in Georgia; while previous protests and demonstrations had occurred in Abkhazia, none had seen any casualties.[27] Although a continuous presence of the Interior Ministry troops maintained a precarious peace in the region, outbursts of violence did occur, and the Soviet government made no progress toward solving any of the inter-ethnic problems.[28] The Georgians suspected the attack on their university was intentionally staged by the Abkhaz secessionists in order to provoke a large-scale violence that would prompt Moscow to declare a martial law in the region, thus depriving the government in Tbilisi of any control over the autonomous structures in Abkhazia. At the same time, they accused the Soviet government of manipulating ethnic issues to curb Georgia's otherwise irrepressible independence movement. On the other hand, the Abkhaz claimed that the new university was an instrument in the hands of Georgians to reinforce their cultural dominance in the region, and continued to demand that the investigation of the July events be turned over to Moscow and that no branch of Tbilisi State University be opened in Sukhumi.[29]

Tensions remained high in Abkhazia, and saw the Abkhaz totally disregard Georgian authority in the region. This was confirmed on 25 August 1990, when the Abkhaz Supreme Soviet passed a declaration, "On Abkhazia's State Sovereignty," which gave supremacy to Abkhaz laws over Georgian ones.[30] The same day the Supreme Soviet also declared Abkhazia to be a full union republic within the Soviet Union.[31] This was countered by accusations from Georgians that the Abkhaz were not the original inhabitants of the region, a claim first promoted by Georgian scholars in the 1950s but without any serious academic or historic basis.[32] The victory of a nationalist coalition in October 1990 only further led to increased issues, as the newly-elected Chairman of the Georgian Supreme Soviet, Zviad Gamsakhurdia, was outspoken in his desire to reduce the autonomy of the non-Georgian population in the country.[33] By this point, however, Georgian authority had effectively ceased in Abkhazia: Abkhazia took part in the Soviet referendum on 17 March 1991, which the rest of Georgia boycotted, while the non-Georgian population of region (along with South Ossetia, another autonomous region of Georgia), in turn boycotted the referendum on independence on 9 April 1991.[34][35]

A power-sharing deal was agreed upon in August 1991, dividing electoral districts by ethnicity, with the 1991 elections held under this format, though it did not last.[31] However with the breakdown of the Gamsakhurida government in Georgia, and efforts by Eduard Shevardnadze to delegitimize Gamsakhurdia by failing to honour agreements he signed, and Abkhaz desires to utilize the ongoing Georgian Civil War, it fell apart.[36] Thus on 23 July 1992, the Abkhaz Supreme Soviet re-instated the 1925 constitution, which had called Abkhazia a sovereign state, albeit one in treaty union with Georgia.[37] Georgia responded militarily on 14 August, starting an offensive. The ensuing war would last until September 1993, and lead to the ongoing Abkhaz–Georgian conflict.[38] In the aftermath of the 1992–1993 war, the Sukhumi branch of Tbilisi State University, which had remained open, was relocated to Tbilisi as the city fell out of Georgian control. It was re-established in Tbilisi in December 1993, and remains there.[39]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Rayfield 2012, p. 326
  2. ^ Suny 1994, p. 321
  3. ^ Lang 1962, pp. 264–265
  4. ^ a b Suny 1994, pp. 304–305
  5. ^ Cornell 2002, pp. 146–149
  6. ^ Alaverdov, Emilia; Bari, Muhammad Waseem (2021). Handbook of Research on Ethnic, Racial, and Religious Conflicts and Their Impact on State and Social Security. IGI Global. p. 93. ISBN 9781799889137.
  7. ^ Lakoba 1995, p. 99
  8. ^ Hewitt 1993, p. 282
  9. ^ Slider 1985, pp. 59–62
  10. ^ Hewitt 1996, p. 202
  11. ^ Francis 2011, p. 73
  12. ^ Sources differ on the number of dead: Stephen Jones, a historian of the Caucasus, states 19 (Jones 2013, pp. 31–32), while the BBC and Eurasianet, a news website focusing on the Caucasus, both claim 20 (Eke 2009; Lomsadze 2014); Donald Rayfield, a professor of Russian and Georgian literature and history, has written that 21 died (Rayfield 2012, p. 378)
  13. ^ Jones 2013, p. 35
  14. ^ Rayfield 2012, pp. 378–380
  15. ^ Slider 1985, pp. 62–63
  16. ^ Slider 1985, p. 63
  17. ^ Francis 2011, p. 74
  18. ^ Chervonnaya 1994, p. 65
  19. ^ a b Kaufman 2001, pp. 104–105
  20. ^ Hewitt 2013, p. 75
  21. ^ a b Kaufman 2001, p. 105
  22. ^ a b Popkov 1998, p. 115
  23. ^ Beissinger 2002, pp. 301–303
  24. ^ Popkov 1998, p. 118
  25. ^ Popkov 1998, pp. 118–120
  26. ^ Kaufman 2001, p. 238: "Citation 111, which references Elizabeth Fuller, "The South Ossetian Campaign or Unification," p. 18 Report on the USSR, 1, No. 30 (July 28, 1989)."
  27. ^ Zürcher 2005, p. 89
  28. ^ Ozhiganov 1997, p. 374
  29. ^ Suny 1994, p. 399
  30. ^ Jones 2013, p. 44
  31. ^ a b Zürcher 2005, p. 95
  32. ^ Hewitt 2013, pp. 47–48, 80–83
  33. ^ Suny 1994, p. 325
  34. ^ Francis 2011, p. 75
  35. ^ Zürcher 2005, p. 93
  36. ^ Zürcher 2005, pp. 95–96
  37. ^ Saparov 2015, p. 65
  38. ^ Rayfield 2012, pp. 383–384
  39. ^ Sokhumi State University 2014

Bibliography edit

  • Beissinger, Mark R. (2002), Nationalist Mobilization and the Collapse of the Soviet State, Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-00148-X
  • Chervonnaya, Svetlana (1994), Conflict in the Caucasus: Georgia, Abkhazia and the Russian Shadow, translated by Ariane Chanturia, Glastonbury, United Kingdom: Gothic Image Publications, ISBN 978-0-90-636230-3
  • Cornell, Svante E. (2002), Autonomy and Conflict: Ethnoterritoriality and Separatism in the South Caucasus: Cases in Georgia, Uppsala, Sweden: Uppsala University, Department of Peace and Conflict Research, ISBN 91-506-1600-5
  • Eke, Stephen (2009), Georgia recalls Soviet crackdown, BBC, retrieved 2018-01-05
  • Francis, Céline (2011), Conflict Resolution and Status: The Case of Georgia and Abkhazia (1989–2008), Brussels: VUB Press, ISBN 978-90-5487-899-5
  • Hewitt, B.G. (1993), "Abkhazia: A problem of identity and ownership", Central Asian Survey, 12 (3): 267–323, doi:10.1080/02634939308400819
  • Hewitt, George (2013), Discordant Neighbours: A Reassessment of the Georgian-Abkhazian and Georgian-South Ossetian Conflicts, Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill, ISBN 978-9-00-424892-2
  • Hewitt, B.G (1996), "The Georgian/South Ossetian territorial and boundary dispute", in Wright, John F.R.; Goldenberg, Suzanne; Schofield, Richard (eds.), Transcaucasian Boundaries, London: UCL Press Limited, pp. 190–225, ISBN 1-85728-234-5
  • Jones, Stephen (2013), Georgia: A Political History Since Independence, London: I.B. Taurus, ISBN 978-1-78453-085-3
  • Kaufman, Stuart J. (2001), Modern Hatreds: The Symbolic Politics of Ethnic War, Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, ISBN 0-8014-8736-6
  • Lakoba, Stanislav (1995), "Abkhazia is Abkhazia", Central Asian Survey, 14 (1): 97–105, doi:10.1080/02634939508400893
  • Lang, David Marshall (1962), A Modern History of Soviet Georgia, New York City: Grove Press, OCLC 317495278
  • Lomsadze, Giorgi (2014), For Tbilisi, the Battle of April 9, 1989 Continues, Eurasianet, retrieved 2018-01-05
  • Ozhiganov, Edward (1997), "The Republic of Georgia: Conflict in Abkhazia and South Ossetia", in Arbatov, Alexei; Chayes, Abram; Handler Chayes, Antonia; Olson, Lara (eds.), Managing Conflict in the Former Soviet Union: Russian and American Perspectives, Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press, pp. 341–400, ISBN 0-262-51093-6
  • Popkov, Viktor (1998), "Soviet Abkhazia 1989: A Personal Account", in Hewitt, George (ed.), The Abkhazians: A Handbook, New York City: St. Martin's Press, pp. 102–131, ISBN 978-0-31-221975-8
  • Rayfield, Donald (2012), Edge of Empires: A History of Georgia, London: Reaktion Books, ISBN 978-1-78-023030-6
  • Saparov, Arsène (2015), From Conflict to Autonomy in the Caucasus: The Soviet Union and the making of Abkhazia, South Ossetia and Nagorno Karabakh, New York City: Routledge, ISBN 978-0-41-565802-7
  • Slider, Darrell (1985), "Crisis and response in Soviet nationality policy: The case of Abkhazia", Central Asian Survey, 4 (4): 51–68, doi:10.1080/02634938508400523
  • Sokhumi State University (2014), , archived from the original on 2018-01-03, retrieved 2018-01-03
  • Suny, Ronald Grigor (1994), The Making of the Georgian Nation (Second ed.), Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, ISBN 978-0-25-320915-3
  • Zürcher, Christoph (2005), "Georgia's Time of Troubles, 1989–1993", in Coppieters, Bruno; Legvold, Robert (eds.), Statehood and Security: Georgia after the Rose Revolution, Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press, pp. 83–115, ISBN 0-262-03343-7

1989, sukhumi, riots, sukhumi, riot, riot, sukhumi, abkhaz, autonomous, soviet, socialist, republic, georgian, soviet, socialist, republic, soviet, union, july, 1989, triggered, increasing, inter, ethnic, tensions, between, abkhaz, georgian, communities, follo. The Sukhumi riot was a riot in Sukhumi Abkhaz Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic Soviet Union in July 1989 triggered by an increasing inter ethnic tensions between the Abkhaz and Georgian communities and followed by several days of street fighting and civil unrest in Sukhumi and throughout Abkhazia 1989 Sukhumi riotsPart of Georgian Abkhaz conflict and Dissolution of the Soviet UnionDateJuly 1989LocationSukhumi Abkhaz ASSR43 00 12 N 41 00 55 E 43 00333 N 41 01528 E 43 00333 41 01528Caused byOpening of a Tbilisi State University branch in SukhumiMethodsRioting street fighting looting siegePartiesAbkhaz civilians Georgian civilians Soviet policeCasualtiesDeath s 18Injuries448The riots started as an Abkhaz protest against opening of a branch of Tbilisi State University in Sukhumi and concluded with looting of the Georgian school which was expected to house the new university on 16 July 1989 The ensuing violence quickly degenerated into a large scale inter ethnic confrontation By the time when the Soviet army managed to temporarily bring the situation under control the riots resulted in at least 18 dead and 448 injured mostly Georgians The first case of inter ethnic violence in Georgia it effectively marked the start of the Georgian Abkhaz conflict Contents 1 Background 2 The university controversy 3 The riots 4 Aftermath 5 Notes 6 BibliographyBackground editSee also History of Abkhazia Abkhazia being part of medieval Kingdom of Georgia and western Georgian Kingdom of Imereti joined the Georgia in modern times as recently as 1918 as an autonomous entity 1 After Soviet annexation of Georgia from 1921 until 1931 Abkhazia was a quasi independent Soviet republic the Socialist Soviet Republic of Abkhazia SSR Abkhazia united with the Georgian SSR in a special treaty status but not fully subservient This arrangement ended when the SSR Abkhazia was downgraded into the Abkhaz ASSR and fully under the control of the Georgian SSR 2 In 1956 Georgians protested a policy of de stalinization of Nikita Khrushchev inflamed by sarcastic and bitter manner in which Khrushchev emphasized Stalin s Georgian character 3 Thus Stalin s denigration was seen as a symbol for the mistreatment of Georgian national consciousness at the hands of the Soviet rulers 4 The protests were violently dispersed by the Soviet authorities with estimates of the number of casualties ranging from several dozens to several hundred 4 5 The separatist elements in Abkhazia capitalized on these circumstances to win over the support of the Soviet government and launched counter protests in 1957 including against autonomous status of Abkhazia within Georgia Anti Georgian telegrams letters and statements were sent to the central Soviet authorities in Moscow by the Abkhaz while the Georgian inscriptions in Abkhazia were destroyed or falsified 6 The Soviet government responded by granting significant privilages to the Abkhaz These protests were repeated again in 1967 and in 1978 the latter capitalizing on embarrassment faced by the Soviet government when it had to concede to the Georgian protesters who thus successfully defended the constitutional status of Georgian language in the Georgian SSR 7 Therefore each time the Abkhaz protests resulted in the Soviet government favoring the Abkhaz and granting ethnic based privilages in the Abkhaz SSR These privilages included the upgrading of the Sukhum Pedagogical Institute into a full university Abkhaz State University but also wide over representation of the Abkhaz in the nomenklatura 8 9 As the Georgian dissidents began to campaign for the Georgian independence and mobilized large number of protesters in the late 1980s on 17 June 1988 an 87 page document known as the Abkhazian Letter was sent to Mikhail Gorbachev and the rest of the Soviet leadership Signed by 60 leading Abkhaz Communists it outlined the grievances the Abkhaz felt and argued that despite the concessions of 1978 autonomy had largely been ignored in the region Thus it asked for Abkhazia to be removed from the Georgian SSR and to be restored as a full Soviet republic akin to the SSR Abkhazia 10 Further issues occurred on 18 March 1989 Around 37 000 people met at the village of Lykhny a traditional meeting spot for the Abkhaz and signed what became known as the Lykhny Declaration It once again called for Abkhazia to become a separate republic like it was between 1921 and 1931 The Declaration which unlike the prior Abkhazian Letter was made public immediately saw mass opposition demonstrations from the Georgian community in Abkhazia 11 The protests climaxed in the Georgian capital of Tbilisi and evolved into a major anti Soviet and pro independence rally on 9 April 1989 which was violently dispersed by Soviet Interior Ministry troops resulting in the deaths of at least nineteen mostly young women and the injury of hundreds of demonstrators 12 At a plenum of the Georgian central committee the following day the Communist party first secretary Jumber Patiashvili resigned and was replaced by the former head of the Georgian KGB Givi Gumbaridze 13 The 9 April tragedy removed the last vestiges of credibility from the Soviet regime in Georgia and pushed many Georgians into radical opposition to the Soviet Union and exacerbated ethnic tensions between Georgians and other groups in particular the Abkhaz and Ossetians 14 The university controversy edit nbsp The status of Abkhazian State University pictured here in 2013 was the source of the riots The issue of a university had always been very sensitive in Abkhazia Sukhumi State University was established in 1978 as a part of the concessions towards the Abkhaz secessionist demands which in its turn was triggered by the Georgian national mobilization in defense of their language and culture The university had three sectors Abkhaz Georgian and Russian 15 However Georgian students repeatedly complained of discrimination at the hands of their Abkhaz and Russian lectors and administration 16 In the aftermath of the 9 April events Georgian students at Sukhumi State University started a hunger strike calling for the Georgian sector of the university to be transformed into a branch of Tbilisi State University and in effect controlled by Georgians and not Abkhaz 17 Joined by students and faculty from the Subtropical Institute this was part of a campaign started by ethnic Georgians in Abkhazia for greater cultural separation and more clear division between the two ethnic groups Aware it would cause unrest in Abkhazia the authorities approved the measure on 14 May 18 In response Abkhaz organized a sit in The Supreme Soviet in Moscow also launched a commission which ruled that the Georgians had no authority to establish the university as that was solely under its purview 19 They concluded that a region the size of Abkhazia had no need for two universities 20 The riots editDespite the ruling against the legality of the university entrance exams were scheduled for 15 July 21 Attempts by Abkhaz to photograph the crowds of Georgians congregated in the city is said to have started the violence 22 21 By 7 00pm the university was under attack 22 Late on 16 July a crowd of five thousand Abkhaz many of whom were armed surged into the building Several members of the Georgian exam commission were beaten up and the school was looted 23 This set off a chain of events that produced further casualties and destruction as the both sides engaged in armed fighting for several days to come That evening Abkhaz and Georgians began mobilizing all over Abkhazia and western Georgia Svans an ethnic Georgian subgroup from northeastern Abkhazia and Abkhaz from the town of Tkvarcheli in Abkhazia clashed in a shootout that lasted all night and intermittently for several days afterward 19 Meanwhile up to 25 000 Georgians from western Georgia and the predominantly Georgian Gali district in southern Abkhazia gathered near Ochamchire 24 Soviet Interior Ministry troops were sent in to restore order and by 17 July the violence had largely dissipated 25 Aftermath editThe July events in Abkhazia left at least 18 dead and 448 injured of whom according to official accounts 302 were Georgians 26 It also marked the first case of inter ethnic violence in Georgia while previous protests and demonstrations had occurred in Abkhazia none had seen any casualties 27 Although a continuous presence of the Interior Ministry troops maintained a precarious peace in the region outbursts of violence did occur and the Soviet government made no progress toward solving any of the inter ethnic problems 28 The Georgians suspected the attack on their university was intentionally staged by the Abkhaz secessionists in order to provoke a large scale violence that would prompt Moscow to declare a martial law in the region thus depriving the government in Tbilisi of any control over the autonomous structures in Abkhazia At the same time they accused the Soviet government of manipulating ethnic issues to curb Georgia s otherwise irrepressible independence movement On the other hand the Abkhaz claimed that the new university was an instrument in the hands of Georgians to reinforce their cultural dominance in the region and continued to demand that the investigation of the July events be turned over to Moscow and that no branch of Tbilisi State University be opened in Sukhumi 29 Tensions remained high in Abkhazia and saw the Abkhaz totally disregard Georgian authority in the region This was confirmed on 25 August 1990 when the Abkhaz Supreme Soviet passed a declaration On Abkhazia s State Sovereignty which gave supremacy to Abkhaz laws over Georgian ones 30 The same day the Supreme Soviet also declared Abkhazia to be a full union republic within the Soviet Union 31 This was countered by accusations from Georgians that the Abkhaz were not the original inhabitants of the region a claim first promoted by Georgian scholars in the 1950s but without any serious academic or historic basis 32 The victory of a nationalist coalition in October 1990 only further led to increased issues as the newly elected Chairman of the Georgian Supreme Soviet Zviad Gamsakhurdia was outspoken in his desire to reduce the autonomy of the non Georgian population in the country 33 By this point however Georgian authority had effectively ceased in Abkhazia Abkhazia took part in the Soviet referendum on 17 March 1991 which the rest of Georgia boycotted while the non Georgian population of region along with South Ossetia another autonomous region of Georgia in turn boycotted the referendum on independence on 9 April 1991 34 35 A power sharing deal was agreed upon in August 1991 dividing electoral districts by ethnicity with the 1991 elections held under this format though it did not last 31 However with the breakdown of the Gamsakhurida government in Georgia and efforts by Eduard Shevardnadze to delegitimize Gamsakhurdia by failing to honour agreements he signed and Abkhaz desires to utilize the ongoing Georgian Civil War it fell apart 36 Thus on 23 July 1992 the Abkhaz Supreme Soviet re instated the 1925 constitution which had called Abkhazia a sovereign state albeit one in treaty union with Georgia 37 Georgia responded militarily on 14 August starting an offensive The ensuing war would last until September 1993 and lead to the ongoing Abkhaz Georgian conflict 38 In the aftermath of the 1992 1993 war the Sukhumi branch of Tbilisi State University which had remained open was relocated to Tbilisi as the city fell out of Georgian control It was re established in Tbilisi in December 1993 and remains there 39 Notes edit Rayfield 2012 p 326 Suny 1994 p 321 Lang 1962 pp 264 265 a b Suny 1994 pp 304 305 Cornell 2002 pp 146 149 Alaverdov Emilia Bari Muhammad Waseem 2021 Handbook of Research on Ethnic Racial and Religious Conflicts and Their Impact on State and Social Security IGI Global p 93 ISBN 9781799889137 Lakoba 1995 p 99 Hewitt 1993 p 282 Slider 1985 pp 59 62 Hewitt 1996 p 202 Francis 2011 p 73 Sources differ on the number of dead Stephen Jones a historian of the Caucasus states 19 Jones 2013 pp 31 32 while the BBC and Eurasianet a news website focusing on the Caucasus both claim 20 Eke 2009 Lomsadze 2014 Donald Rayfield a professor of Russian and Georgian literature and history has written that 21 died Rayfield 2012 p 378 Jones 2013 p 35 Rayfield 2012 pp 378 380 Slider 1985 pp 62 63 Slider 1985 p 63 Francis 2011 p 74 Chervonnaya 1994 p 65 a b Kaufman 2001 pp 104 105 Hewitt 2013 p 75 a b Kaufman 2001 p 105 a b Popkov 1998 p 115 Beissinger 2002 pp 301 303 Popkov 1998 p 118 Popkov 1998 pp 118 120 Kaufman 2001 p 238 Citation 111 which references Elizabeth Fuller The South Ossetian Campaign or Unification p 18 Report on the USSR 1 No 30 July 28 1989 Zurcher 2005 p 89 Ozhiganov 1997 p 374 Suny 1994 p 399 Jones 2013 p 44 a b Zurcher 2005 p 95 Hewitt 2013 pp 47 48 80 83 Suny 1994 p 325 Francis 2011 p 75 Zurcher 2005 p 93 Zurcher 2005 pp 95 96 Saparov 2015 p 65 Rayfield 2012 pp 383 384 Sokhumi State University 2014Bibliography editBeissinger Mark R 2002 Nationalist Mobilization and the Collapse of the Soviet State Cambridge United Kingdom Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 00148 X Chervonnaya Svetlana 1994 Conflict in the Caucasus Georgia Abkhazia and the Russian Shadow translated by Ariane Chanturia Glastonbury United Kingdom Gothic Image Publications ISBN 978 0 90 636230 3 Cornell Svante E 2002 Autonomy and Conflict Ethnoterritoriality and Separatism in the South Caucasus Cases in Georgia Uppsala Sweden Uppsala University Department of Peace and Conflict Research ISBN 91 506 1600 5 Eke Stephen 2009 Georgia recalls Soviet crackdown BBC retrieved 2018 01 05 Francis Celine 2011 Conflict Resolution and Status The Case of Georgia and Abkhazia 1989 2008 Brussels VUB Press ISBN 978 90 5487 899 5 Hewitt B G 1993 Abkhazia A problem of identity and ownership Central Asian Survey 12 3 267 323 doi 10 1080 02634939308400819 Hewitt George 2013 Discordant Neighbours A Reassessment of the Georgian Abkhazian and Georgian South Ossetian Conflicts Leiden The Netherlands Brill ISBN 978 9 00 424892 2 Hewitt B G 1996 The Georgian South Ossetian territorial and boundary dispute in Wright John F R Goldenberg Suzanne Schofield Richard eds Transcaucasian Boundaries London UCL Press Limited pp 190 225 ISBN 1 85728 234 5 Jones Stephen 2013 Georgia A Political History Since Independence London I B Taurus ISBN 978 1 78453 085 3 Kaufman Stuart J 2001 Modern Hatreds The Symbolic Politics of Ethnic War Ithaca New York Cornell University Press ISBN 0 8014 8736 6 Lakoba Stanislav 1995 Abkhazia is Abkhazia Central Asian Survey 14 1 97 105 doi 10 1080 02634939508400893 Lang David Marshall 1962 A Modern History of Soviet Georgia New York City Grove Press OCLC 317495278 Lomsadze Giorgi 2014 For Tbilisi the Battle of April 9 1989 Continues Eurasianet retrieved 2018 01 05 Ozhiganov Edward 1997 The Republic of Georgia Conflict in Abkhazia and South Ossetia in Arbatov Alexei Chayes Abram Handler Chayes Antonia Olson Lara eds Managing Conflict in the Former Soviet Union Russian and American Perspectives Cambridge Massachusetts The MIT Press pp 341 400 ISBN 0 262 51093 6 Popkov Viktor 1998 Soviet Abkhazia 1989 A Personal Account in Hewitt George ed The Abkhazians A Handbook New York City St Martin s Press pp 102 131 ISBN 978 0 31 221975 8 Rayfield Donald 2012 Edge of Empires A History of Georgia London Reaktion Books ISBN 978 1 78 023030 6 Saparov Arsene 2015 From Conflict to Autonomy in the Caucasus The Soviet Union and the making of Abkhazia South Ossetia and Nagorno Karabakh New York City Routledge ISBN 978 0 41 565802 7 Slider Darrell 1985 Crisis and response in Soviet nationality policy The case of Abkhazia Central Asian Survey 4 4 51 68 doi 10 1080 02634938508400523 Sokhumi State University 2014 Brief History of University archived from the original on 2018 01 03 retrieved 2018 01 03 Suny Ronald Grigor 1994 The Making of the Georgian Nation Second ed Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 25 320915 3 Zurcher Christoph 2005 Georgia s Time of Troubles 1989 1993 in Coppieters Bruno Legvold Robert eds Statehood and Security Georgia after the Rose Revolution Cambridge Massachusetts The MIT Press pp 83 115 ISBN 0 262 03343 7 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1989 Sukhumi riots amp oldid 1193404153, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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