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| Georgian Civil War | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Part of thepost-Soviet conflicts, theWars in the Caucasus, and theDissolution of the Soviet Union | |||||||
Location of Georgia (including Abkhazia and South Ossetia) and the Russian part ofNorth Caucasus | |||||||
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| Belligerents | |||||||
Supported by: |
Supported by: | ||||||
| Commanders and leaders | |||||||
| Casualties and losses | |||||||
| Total deaths: Up to 2,000[4] | |||||||
TheGeorgian Civil War (Georgian:საქართველოს სამოქალაქო ომი,sakartvelos samokalako omi) lasted from 1991 to 1993 in theSouth Caucasian country ofGeorgia. It began in December 1991 with thecoup against the first democratically-electedPresident of Georgia,Zviad Gamsakhurdia, by the rebel factions of theGeorgian National Guard and theMkhedrioni paramilitary.[5] It led to President Gamsakhurdia fleeing to neighboringChechnya, and his subsequent insurgency and unsuccessful uprising to regain power in 1992–1993.
During thedissolution of the Soviet Union, an opposition movement in Georgia organized mass protests starting in 1988, culminating in a declaration of sovereignty in May 1990 and independence on April 9, 1991, which was recognized in December after the failedAugust Coup. Zviad Gamsakhurdia waselected President in May 1991.
Meanwhile, ethnic minority separatist movements, primarily on the part of theOssetians and theAbkhaz, demanded secession from Georgia. A petition for a separateAbkhazian SSR was submitted to the Soviet Union in March 1989, followed byanti-Georgian riots in July. TheSouth Ossetian Autonomous Oblast declared independence from Georgia SSR in September 1990. The crisis culminated in theFirst South Ossetian War breaking out in January 1991. TheGeorgian-Ossetian Conflict was the first major crisis faced by Gamsakhurdia's government.
In August 1991, theGeorgian National Guard launched a mutiny against President Zviad Gamsakhurdia and seized a government broadcast station in September.[6] Following the police dispersion of a large opposition demonstration inTbilisi on September 2, several opposition leaders were arrested and their offices raided and pro-opposition newspapers were closed. The National Guard of Georgia, the major paramilitary force in the country, split into two factions; pro- and anti-Gamsakhurdia, the latter being headed by the sacked National Guard commanderTengiz Kitovani. Another paramilitary organization, theMkhedrioni, led byJaba Ioseliani, also sided with the opposition.
Demonstrations and barricade-building marked the next three months, with sporadic clashes between pro- and anti-Gamsakhurdia forces. On September 24 a state of emergency was declared inTbilisi. By late October 1991, most of the leadership of the oppositionNational Democratic Party (NDP), headed byGiorgi Chanturia, had been arrested. A stand-off followed as the anti-Gamsakhurdia factions of the National Guard withdrew to the outskirts ofTbilisi where they remained until late December 1991.
On 20 December 1991, Kitovani's fighters returned in force to begin the final onslaught against Gamsakhurdia. The armed opposition releasedJaba Ioseliani from prison and mounted barricades in central Tbilisi. On December 22, the rebels seized several official buildings, and attacked the Parliament building where Gamsakhurdia and his supporters were holding the position. Simultaneously, the rebels, already controlling most of the city,brutally suppressed pro-Gamsakhurdia protests in and around Tbilisi. They fired on the crowds, killing and wounding several people.
On 6 January 1992, President Gamsakhurdia with other members of his government was forced to flee first toArmenia and then toChechnya, where he led a form of government-in-exile for the next 18 months.
Within several days of the fighting, the main boulevard in the city,Rustaveli Avenue, had been destroyed, and at least 113 people were killed.
After the successful coup, an interim government, theMilitary Council, was formed in Georgia. Initially it was led by a triumvirate ofJaba Ioseliani,Tengiz Sigua andTengiz Kitovani, but it was soon chaired byEduard Shevardnadze, the formerGeorgian SSR leader andSovietforeign minister who returned to Tbilisi in March 1992. The1992 elections established Shevardnadze as the Chairman of Parliament and the Head of State.
Zviad Gamsakhurdia, despite his absence, continued to enjoy substantial support within Georgia, especially in rural areas and in his home region ofSamegrelo in western Georgia. The pro-Gamsakhurdia forces established Samegrelo as their base and the clashes between pro- and anti-Gamsakhurdia forces continued throughout 1992 and 1993 withZviad Gamsakhurdia's supporters taking captive government officials and government forces retaliating with reprisal raids. One of the most serious incidents occurred inTbilisi on June 24, 1992, when armed Gamsakhurdia supporters seized the state television center. However, they were driven out within a few hours by the National Guard.[7]
The armed "Zviadists" actually prevented the new government forces from gaining control of Gamsakhurdia's nativeSamegrelo region, which became the stronghold of the overthrown president's supporters. Numerous acts of violence and atrocities committed by theMkhedrioni and government forces in this region contributed to further confrontation between the local population and Shevardnadze's regime.
Following the coup and armed clashes in western Georgia,Aslan Abashidze, the leader of southwestern autonomous province ofAdjara, closed an administrative border and prevented both sides from entering Adjarian territory. This established Abashidze's authoritarian semi-separatist regime within the region, and created long-term problems in relations between the regional government and the central government of Georgia.
During theAbkhazian war, the role ofVakhtang (Loti) Kobalia's militia, the major force of the former President's supporters, continued to be controversial. Kobalia's militia fought on the Georgian side near the village ofTamish inAbkhazia and played an important role in defeating the Abkhaz-North Caucasian commandos. This step was assessed by Shevardnadze as a 'beginning of national reconciliation'. At the same time, they stirred their activities prior to the Abkhaz launching their main assault onSokhumi. On July 9–10, 72 deputies of the former Supreme Council that had been ousted in January 1992, held a session inZugdidi and declared the 'restoration of the legitimate government'. Broadcasting on their TV channel became more frequent. From July to August Kobalia's militia effectively solidified its control in a significant part of theSamegrelo province.
In September 1993,Zviad Gamsakhurdia returned to the city of Zugdidi, western Georgia, from Chechnya and rallied enthusiastic but disorganized Georgians in Samegrelo region against the demoralized and unpopular government ofEduard Shevardnadze. Although Gamsakhurdia initially represented his return as a rescue of Georgian forces after theAbkhazian disaster, his forces withdrew fromOchamchire in late September 1993.
In October 1993, the Georgian Civil War reached its climax. The advance of ex-president's forces from Samegrelo made Shevardnadze to join theCommonwealth of Independent States (CIS) and appeal forRussian military assistance. In mid-October, the addition ofRussian weapons, supply-line security, and technical assistance turned the tide against Gamsakhurdia. On October 20, around 2,000 Russian troops moved to protect Georgian railroads.[8]
On October 22, 1993, the government forces launched an offensive against pro-Gamsakhurdia rebels led by Colonel Loti Kobalia and, with the help of Russian military, occupied most ofSamegrelo province. The ex-president's forces counter-attacked on October 27. Heavy fighting concentrated around the towns ofKhobi andSenaki. From November 2, following an agreement between Eduard Shevardnadze and Russian leadership,[9] a Russian marine battalion wasdeployed to Poti in order to secure critical transport infrastructure,[10] including railroads and ports, from Zviadist rebels under the direction of Admiral Eduard Baltin, commander of theBlack Sea Fleet.[11] In order to obtain this support, Shevardnadze had to agree to Georgian accession to CIS and the establishment of Russian military installations within Georgia.[12] On November 4, 1993, the government forces broke through the defence lines of the Zviadist militias and enteredZugdidi without fighting on November 6.[13] Their troops moved to theEnguri river by 9 November.[14]Zviad Gamsakhurdia and his bodyguards escaped to the forests chased by the government forces. He died in late December under controversial circumstances. It was later reported that Gamsakhurdia had shot himself (though unproven, with many errors in the original investigation[15]) on December 31, in a villageJikhashkari (Samegrelo region of Western Georgia). The revolt was crushed and the region was overrun by the pro-governmental paramilitaries. Several Zviadist leaders were arrested in the following years.
The three-year civil war produced a decade of political instability, permanent financial, economic and social crises. The situation began to stabilize in 1995. However, radical "Zviadists" organized several acts of terrorism and sabotage. They were charged for the assassination attempt of PresidentEduard Shevardnadze on 9 February 1998. A few days later, supporters of the former president kidnapped four observers from theUnited Nations Observer Mission in Georgia from their compound inZugdidi in western Georgia. Some of the hostage takers surrendered, but Gocha Esebua, the leader of the Zviadist team, escaped and was killed in a shootout with police on 31 March.
On October 18, 1998, there was anattempted revolt led by ColonelAkaki Eliava, a formerZviadist officer, nearKutaisi, Georgia's second largest city. After the collapse of the mutiny, Eliava and his followers hid in the forests ofSamegrelo. He had produced permanent problems for the government until he was shot by security officers in 2000.
On January 26, 2004, the newly elected PresidentMikheil Saakashvili officially rehabilitated Gamsakhurdia to resolve the lingering political effects of his overthrow in an effort to "put an end to disunity in our society", as Saakashvili put it. He also released 32 Gamsakhurdia supporters arrested by Shevardnadze's government in 1993–1994.
On December 20, 1991, the political opposition to Gamsakhurdia issued new calls for his resignation. When the president ignored them, Kitovani's National Guard, together with members of Ioseliani's Mkhedrioni, launched an "all-out attack on the Georgian parliament building, where the president had gone to ground," leaving considerable parts of downtown Tbilisi in ruins, as they remain today.18 This was the beginning of the Georgian civil war.
According to the commission's report the investigation into Gamsakhurdia's death was carried out with negligence of crucial circumstances and through ignorance of major evidence. It says that key evidence, including gun and also a bullet, from which Gamsakhurdia allegedly committed suicide disappeared. According to the report there are multiple inconsistencies in the official investigation, which give a reason to cast doubt over its conclusions that Gamsakhurdia committed suicide.