by pereulok
Fri Jun 6th, 2008 at 07:55:20 AM EST
I just read the title of a recent report from Crisis Group on Abkhazian-Russian-Georgian conflict:
Georgia and Russia: Clashing over Abkhazia
5 June 2008
Moscow and Tbilisi need to cease military preparations in and around Abkhazia and cool their rhetoric lest their increasingly dangerous confrontation bring war to the Caucasus.
(
full report)
It´s nice for a (once upon a time meant-to-be) social researcher to see that her papers don´t get old, yet I would like mine about Abkhazia, written in 2002, to become rubbish... Itīs so sad to feel like an expert of an issue I havenīt paid much attention for 4-5 years (time enough to many new generation phones and so on to get into the market...)
Because the date could as well have been 2003, or even 1998... Abkhazia, a non-recognized state since 1991, a non-state, a failing state, a puppet state... Lost in a mess of poverty and ethnic-cleansing, survival economy and local mafia, local low-intensity war ("clashes") and regional (and even international, in the context of the links of islamic extremism and Chechen radical groups...) power politics. A case to remember that is, sadly, forgotten. Just information now and then on crisis peaks, having more to do with bargaining in Georgia-Russia relations than with real change in the nature of conflict and situation.
[editor's note, by Migeru] fold inserted here
It´s scary to think that there´s a generation of teenagers, heading to their 18s, who have raised in such a political context while at the other side of the river (northern river: Russia, Southern river: Georgia) life moves forward, maybe slowly, maybe with ups and downs, maybe not with the bests evolution ever, but moving somewhere anyway.
So Abkhazia, South Ossetia, Transdniester, Belorus?, Southern Armenia?, the "holes" of Europe, the places it's said to be possible to travel to the past, and have a glimpse of the worst of Communism from the 80s (the athmosfere and the economical crisis). Hope to see someday history to be in books, and "poverty-enjoying" tourism to become history.
P.S. Balkans conflicts have left other "holes", that also would deserve their own memorial...