<div dir="ltr">All: This is an old item, but one I missed a while back. <br><br><div id="content-header">
<h1 class="">Abkhazia: Preparing for the Future, Post-Bagapsh</h1>
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<span class="">May 31, 2011 - 5:24am</span>, by <span class=""><a href="http://www.eurasianet.org/taxonomy/term/3502">Paul Rimple </a></span> </div>
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<p>The unexpected May 29 death of Sergei Bagapsh, the de facto leader of
the breakaway region of Abkhazia, is certain to shake up Abkhaz
politics, but some Abkhaz observers say that the underlying question is
whether or not it will lead to instability in the territory. </p>
<p>Sixty-two-year-old Bagapsh, hailed by many Abkhaz as a can-do
technocrat who presided over a period of relative calm in the
territory’s topsy-turvy fortunes, succumbed to complications that ended
in heart failure following surgery on his right lung in a Moscow clinic,
Abkhaz and Russian news agencies reported. A spokesperson for the de
facto Abkhaz president told the Russian state-run news agency RIA
Novosti on May 30 that Bagapsh died from cancer. </p>
<p>Bagapsh will be buried on June 2, after three days of official
mourning, in his family's native village of Dzhgyarda, near Ochamchira, a
Black Sea coastal town not far from the administrative border with
Georgian-controlled territory. </p>
<p>Bagapsh’s sudden death after nearly seven years in power has left
many Abkhaz feeling as if a rug has been yanked suddenly from underneath
their feet. "For [the] last few years, we got some feeling of stability
and I hope it will not crash,” commented 30-something Sukhumi native
Vlad Dheniya.</p>
<p>“I saw him three weeks ago. I didn’t see any signs that he was going
to die,” said Liana Kvarchelia, deputy director of the Center for
Humanitarian Programs, a Sukhumi-based non-governmental organization.
Conspiracy theories about foul play have started to circulate,
Kvarchelia said, but noted that local politicians tend to keep their
medical secrets out of the public view. Vladislav Ardzinba, the leader
of Abkhazia’s 1992-1993 rebellion against Tbilisi, resigned in 2004 for
unknown health reasons, widely believed to be cancer. He died in Moscow
in 2010. </p>
<p>Abkhazia’s de facto Vice-President Alexander Ankvab has become acting
president pending a fresh presidential election within three months of
Bagapsh’s death. Along with Ankvab, de facto Prime Minister Sergei
Shamba, a longtime political player and veteran advocate for Abkhaz
independence, and former vice-president and onetime KGB officer Raul
Khadjimba are expected to be front-runners for the post. </p>
<p>Since Russia’s 2008 recognition of Abkhaz independence, Bagapsh had
played a difficult balancing act between increasing Russian influence in
energy, transportation, real estate and defense spheres, and local
critics’ accusations of selling out on Abkhaz independence.</p>
<p>Some observers, like Inal Khashig, editor-in-chief of the independent
newspaper Chegemskaya Pravda, worry that the upcoming power struggle to
succeed Bagapsh will undermine Abkhazia’s stability. In a May 29 column
for Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty’s Ekho Kavkaza, Khashig stated that
Abkhazia is not ready for the political anxiety that will follow
Bagapsh’s death.</p>
<p>“Of course, the president’s death has created enormous problems. The
country is not prepared not only morally; in general, it is not prepared
for political disturbances,” Khashig wrote. “And now everyone
understands that stability has departed with President Bagapsh.”</p>
<p>An avid basketball player, Bagapsh had been head of the local energy
company Chernomorenergo (Black Sea Energy) for six years, when, in 2005,
he became Abkhazia’s second de facto president after a run-off election
against Khadjimba. A local Communist Party boss during the 1980s, he
held various posts in Abkhazia’s separatist government following the
split with Tbilisi, including that of de facto prime minister from
1997-1999. </p>
<p>Liana Kvarchelia believes that although some people expect to see a
power struggle between Shamba and Ankvab this summer, others also
believe that Bagapsh, upon reaching the top of Abkhazia’s political
establishment, had established institutions for the transfer of power. </p>
<p>“I don’t think there will be destabilization,” Kvarchelia said. “In
2009 [when Bagapsh was re-elected to a second de facto term], the people
voted for stabilization and I think they will continue to vote for
stability.”</p>
<p>One of Bagapsh’s great strengths, she says, was his ability to unite
disparate characters. She points to his power-sharing deal with
Khadjimba, a candidate strongly backed by Moscow, following the latter’s
loss in the region’s 2004 de facto presidential election. Now an
outspoken nationalist politician, Khadjimba served as vice-president
until his resignation in 2009. </p>
<p>Other observers like Fyodor Lukyanov, editor-in-chief of the Russia
in Global Affairs journal, believe that Abkhaz voters' strong national
pride and sense of independence mean that Moscow will not be able
openly to influence a particular candidate, as it attempted to do in
2004, when the Kremlin publicly backed Khadjimba. </p>
<p>“At the same time, it (Moscow) cannot let things to get out of
control – that would be a big gift to Georgia and risk further
destabilization in the North Caucasus,” Lukyanov said. The likely
scenario, he adds, is that Moscow will closely consult the parties and
see who has the best chance of consolidating power.</p>
<p>Tbilisi, so far, has commented only that any election to select
Bagapsh’s successor would be invalid and have no impact on Abkhazia’s
political bill of health. </p>
<p>Georgian officials have not indicated whether or not the topic was
discussed during a May 29-31 visit to Tbilisi by Swiss President and
Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey. Switzerland currently acts as
mediator between Russia and Georgia.</p>
<p>Alexander Rondeli, director of Tbilisi’s Georgian Foundation for
Strategic and International Studies, though, also believes that Russia
will stay in the shadows and not repeat its 2004 mistake. As do most
Georgian analysts, he asserts, however, that Abkhazia’s de facto
government is clearly under Russian control.</p>
<p>“Moscow will choose the most obedient guy, but this time they will be
delicate,” Rondeli predicted. “If they openly show a preference, the
people will be against them.”</p><p><a href="http://www.eurasianet.org/node/63583?utm_source=Weekly+Digest&utm_campaign=fe7b25d4a2-my_google_analytics_key&utm_medium=email">http://www.eurasianet.org/node/63583?utm_source=Weekly+Digest&utm_campaign=fe7b25d4a2-my_google_analytics_key&utm_medium=email</a><br>
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