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Pankisi

Coordinates:42°07′N45°16′E / 42.117°N 45.267°E /42.117; 45.267
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromPankisi Gorge)
Gorge in Georgia
Pankisi Gorge
Georgian:პანკისის ხეობა
Pankisi Gorge is located in Georgia
Pankisi Gorge
Pankisi Gorge
Show map of Georgia
Pankisi Gorge is located in Kakheti
Pankisi Gorge
Pankisi Gorge
Show map of Kakheti
Geography
CountryGeorgia
Coordinates42°07′N45°16′E / 42.117°N 45.267°E /42.117; 45.267

Pankisi (Georgian:პანკისი) or thePankisi Gorge (Georgian:პანკისის ხეობა,Pankisis Kheoba)[a] is avalley region inGeorgia, in the upper reaches of RiverAlazani. It lies just south of Georgia’s historic region ofTusheti between Mt Borbalo and the ruined 17th-century fortress ofBakhtrioni.

Administratively, Pankisi is included in theAkhmeta municipality of theKakheti region. The area is about two and half miles wide and eight miles long.[1]

From November 2000 until 2002, the valleyplayed host to an armed formation led by the Chechen commanderRuslan Gelayev, who had fled theSecond Chechen War. After theSeptember 11 terrorist attacks in 2001, both Russian and American political figures made public allegations, which were subsequently either disproved or uncorroborated, that seniorAl-Qaeda leaders were present in the Gorge, and had acquired the nerve agentricin.[2] The Gorge has occasionally been mentioned in subsequent reports linking it toSalafi-jihadist activity.[3]

As of 2019, theKistethnic group accounted for the majority of the area's roughly 5,000 residents.[4] The Kists areVainakhs, usually ofChechen roots, who have moved to the Pankisi area since the 19th Century. Kist culture combines Vainakh traditions with some influences from surrounding eastern Georgia.[1]

History

[edit]
The location of the Pankisi Gorge in Georgia

The 17th-century geographer and historian PrinceVakhushti Bagrationi, in his bookDescription of the Kingdom of Georgia, writes that the inhabitants of Pankisi wereGeorgian nobility of theAznauri andTavadi classes, although his account makes clear that there were also peasants in the area.[5] He described them as intelligent, and as "skilled warriors."

Vakhushti described Pankisi itself as forested, with plentiful fruit trees, andvineyards that produced goodwine. He added that the harvests were good, and the forests rich ingame. Fish were also numerous, he wrote, especially "mountaintrout", and there were many cattle, and many pigs, but few sheep.[5]

In the 1730s, the Pankisi valley was emptied of Georgian population: part of them were killed as a result of the invasions, and rest of them resettled elsewhere.[6]

In 18th century Georgian legislation, the noble (Aznauri) Kobiashvili family of theKingdom of Kakheti are mentioned as the lords of the Pankisi valley.[7][8]

Georgia's 1989 census found that the Pankisi Gorge's population was 43% Kist, 29% Georgian, and 28%Ossetian.[1] However, during the subsequent two decades the valley's ethnic composition changed again under the pressure of regional wars. Many of the valley's Ossetians fled from theSouth Ossetia War and theGeorgian Civil War, to settle inNorth Ossetia-Alania in theRussian Federation.[1] Chechens fled from thetwowars inChechnya, which had attempted to secede from the Russian Federation, and some made their homes in Pankisi's villages.[1] By 2007, the Kists were the largest ethnic group in the area.[1]

The 2014 census did not report a separate demographic breakdown for Pankisi, but found that the wider Akhmeta municipality was home to 5,471 Kists, who constituted roughly 17% of the municipal population.[9] By 2019, Kists were reported to be a majority of Pankisi's roughly-5,000 inhabitants.[4]

Etymology

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According to Mate Albutashvili (also known as Kisti Chobani), the toponym Pankisi is ofGeorgian origin. He writes that Pankisi derives from Pantisi which means "land rich in wild forest pears", (P’ant’a-პანტა) (pyrus caucasica) with the Georgian suffix -სი(si).[6][10]

Pankisi Gorge crisis and local links to Salafi-jidhadism

[edit]
Main article:Pankisi Gorge crisis
The flags of theChechen Republic of Ichkeria andGeorgia flying side-by-side in the Pankisi Gorge

The Pankisi Gorge crisis was a 2002 geopolitical dispute that arose as a direct result of the Second Chechen War, and which was shaped by the U.S. Global War on Terror and pre-existing tensions between Russia and Georgia.[2] From 1999, thousands of refugees from the war in Chechnya, 25 miles to the north, congregated in the valley, including some armed rebels.[11] By 2002, Ruslan Gelayev, a Chechen commander was reported to have gathered hundreds of armed men there.

Russia wanted Georgia to act against Gelayev's band, but Georgia was in dispute with Russia over South Ossetia andAbkhazia, and declined to do so. On the contrary, Gelayev's force allegedly fought on behalf of Georgia in Abkhazia in 2001.[2]

Both Russian and U.S. leaders made public claims during 2002 and 2003 thatAl-Qaeda was operating in the valley, and that a "Chechen network" associated with the organisation had learned to manufacture ricin, a lethal nerve agent. In Russia's case, the claims, which were unfounded, may have been made in an effort to persuade the U.S. to put pressure on Georgia to expel Gelayev and his men.[2] In the event, Gelayev led his column out of Georgia and back onto Russian territory in September 2003, after which Georgian authorities conducted an operation in the Pankisi Gorge.[2][11] It netted 15 alleged militants of Arab heritage, none of whom were thought to have been senior.[2]

Nonetheless, inColin Powell's presentation to the United Nations Security Council in February 2003, theSecretary of State claimed to know that associates of the Al-Qaeda leaderMusab al-Zarqawi had

been active in the Pankisi Gorge, Georgia and in Chechnya, Russia. The plotting to which they are linked is not mere chatter. Members of Zarqawi's network say their goal was to kill Russians with toxins.[12]

Powell showed a slide that depicted a purported Al-Qaeda network under the command of al-Zarqawi, including a bearded man named Abu 'Atiya located in Pankisi, Georgia.[13] Abu 'Atiya was reportedly arrested in Azerbaijan on 12 August 2003, and deported to Jordan.[14]

In 2008, the valley was reported to be peaceful despite the nearbyRusso-Georgian war, and substantial numbers of refugees from Chechnya remained living there[15][16]

The former seniorIslamic State leaderTarkan Batirashvili, otherwise known as "Omar the Chechen," grew up in Pankisi, which was still home to some of his family as of 2014.[17] In 2014, Batirashvilii reportedly threatened to return to the area to lead a Muslim attack on Russian Chechnya.[3] However, the threat never came into fruition, and Batirashvili was killed during a battle in theIraqi town ofAl-Shirqat in 2016.[18]

Notable people

[edit]
  • Zezva Gaprindauli, a leader of the 1659Bakhtrioni uprising against the rule ofSafavid Persia, fortified himself in the Pankisi fortress, but was later captured and executed.
  • Kakutsa Cholokashvili (1888-1930), commander of an anti-Soviet guerrilla movement, was born in the Pankisi village of Matani. He made his base of operations initially in Pankisi, and later, with theKhevsurs in Chechnya.
  • Daro Sulakauri (1985-present), Georgian photojournalist and documentary photographer known for her documentation of Chechen refugees living in the Pankisi Gorge.

Jihadists and North-Caucasian separatists

[edit]
Main article:Pankisi Gorge crisis § List of jihadists and North-Caucasian separatists who have passed through the Pankisi Gorge

A number of transnational jihadists and North-Caucasian separatists - especially Chechens - were either born in, lived in, or passed through the Pankisi Gorge. Several fought in the first or second Chechen wars, were implicated in the Pankisi Gorge crisis, or fought in theSyrian civil war.

Notes

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  1. ^Chechen:ПӀаьнгазхойн чӀаж,romanized: Phängazkhoyn ch'azh,Ingush:ПӀенгишхой чӀож,romanized: Phengishkhoy ch'ozh

References

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  1. ^abcdefSanikidze, George (2007)."Islamic Resurgence in the Modern Caucasian Region: "Global" and "Local" Islam in the Pankisi Gorge". Hokudai University Slavic-Eurasian Research Centre. pp. 263–280. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 19 December 2012. Retrieved21 March 2025.
  2. ^abcdefMcGregor, Andrew (5 May 2005)."Ricin Fever: Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in the Pankisi Gorge".The Jamestown Foundation. Archived fromthe original on 21 March 2025. Retrieved21 March 2025.
  3. ^abMichael Winfrey (October 9, 2014)."Islamic State Grooms Chechen Fighters Against Putin".Bloomberg Businessweek. Archived fromthe original on November 17, 2014.
  4. ^abHauer, Neil (15 July 2019)."Pankisi residents find common cause with other Georgians".Eurasianet. Archived fromthe original on 21 March 2025. Retrieved21 March 2025.
  5. ^ab"აღწერა ჰერეთისა, კახეთისა და კუხეთისა, კუალად თუშეთისა და დიდოეთისა - Wikisource".wikisource.org (in Georgian). Retrieved2024-02-03.
  6. ^abმამისიმედაშვილი, ხვთისო (2008).პანკისი წარსული და თანამედროვეობა [Pankisi Past and Modernity] (in Georgian). თბილისი:Tbilisi State University. p. 17.ISBN 978-9941-13-034-2.
  7. ^დოლიძე, ი (1974).ქართული სამართლის ძეგლები : ტომი V (in Georgian). თბილისი : მეცნიერება. pp. 288–292.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: publisher location (link)
  8. ^მამისიმედიშვილი, ხვთისო (2008).პანკისის წარსული და თანამედროვეობა [Pankisi Past and Modernity] (in Georgian). Tbilisi:Tbilisi State University. p. 19.ISBN 978-9941-13-034-2.
  9. ^"Data table: Results of Georgia's 2014 census - ethnicity by area". Archived fromthe original on 2 March 2025. Retrieved21 March 2025.
  10. ^ალბუთაშვილი, მათე (2005).პანკისის ხეობა [Pankisi Gorge] (in Georgian). თბილისი: გოგი და ნიკო ჯავახიშვილები.
  11. ^abFilkins, Dexter (15 June 2003)."U.S. Entangled in Mystery of Georgia's Islamic Fighters". New York Times. Archived fromthe original on 21 March 2025. Retrieved21 March 2025.
  12. ^"Transcript of Powell's U.N. presentation, Part 9: Ties to al-Qaeda". CNN. Archived fromthe original on 12 October 2015. Retrieved21 March 2025.
  13. ^Powell, Colin (6 February 2003)."Slide 43, February 2006 presentation to the United Nations".George W. Bush White House Archives. Archived fromthe original on 9 July 2012. Retrieved21 March 2025.
  14. ^Moore, Cerwyn; Tumelty, Paul (April 2008)."Foreign Fighters and the Case of Chechnya: A Critical Assessment".Studies in Conflict and Terrorism.31 (5). Taylor & Francis:412–433.doi:10.1080/10576100801993347. Retrieved21 March 2025.
  15. ^BBC News, Russia's reach unnerves Chechens, Wednesday, 16 January 2008.https://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7189024.stm Retrieved September 29, 2010.
  16. ^UNHCR, 'Chechen refugees in Pankisi Gorge resume normal life after Georgia scare', 1 October 2008.http://www.unhcr.org/48e389e12.html Retrieved September 29, 2010.
  17. ^Akhmeteli, Nina (2014-07-09)."Georgian roots of Isis commander".BBC News.
  18. ^"Daesh says top leader Omar Al-Shishani killed in battle".Arab News. 14 July 2016. Retrieved2016-07-13.

Bibliography

[edit]
  • Kurtsikidze, Shorena; Chikovani, Vakhtang (2008).Ethnography and Folklore of the Georgia-Chechnya Border: Images, Customs, Myths & Folk Tales of the Peripheries.Munich: Lincom Europa.

External links

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