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{{short description|1992–1998 removal and flight of Georgians from Abkhazia}}
]
{{Infobox civilian attack
| title = Ethnic cleansing of Georgians in Abkhazia
| image = Abkhazia_genocide_anniversary_2005.jpg
| image_size = 320px
| caption = A visitor at a gallery recognizes her dead son in a photograph on the 12th anniversary of the ethnic cleansing in Abkhazia, 2005.
| location = ], ]
| target = ] population, Oppositions to the new Government of ]
| date = 1992–1998
| type = ], ], ]s, others
| fatalities = 5,000–5,738 killed<ref name = Gamakharia>{{cite book |last1=Gamakharia |first1=Jemal |title=INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY TO BRING A VERDICT ON THE TRAGEDY OF ABKHAZIA/GEORGIA |date=2015 |isbn=978-9941-461-12-5 |pages=7, 62, 94 |publisher=Khvicha Kardava |url=http://dspace.nplg.gov.ge/bitstream/1234/117908/1/Genocidi.pdf |access-date=31 January 2021}}</ref>
| victims = 200,000{{sfn|Anderson|Hammond|1995|p=6}} – 267,345<ref name=abkhaziatoday /> displaced, 400 missing<ref name = Gamakharia/>
| perps = ]
| motive = ]
}}


The '''ethnic cleansing of Georgians in Abkhazia''',<ref>{{bulleted list|3={{Cite journal |last=Mooney |first=Erin D. |year=1995 |title=Internal Displacement and the Conflict in Abkhazia: International Responses and Their Protective Effect |journal=International Journal on Minority and Group Rights |volume=3 |issue=3 |pages=197–226 |doi=10.1163/157181196X00065 |jstor=24674470}}|4={{Cite book |last1=Kurbanov |first1=Rafik Osman-Ogly |url=https://archive.org/details/politicsofreligi0000unse |title=The Politics of Religion in Russia and the New States of Eurasia |last2=Kurbanov |first2=Erjan Rafik-Ogly |publisher=M.E. Sharpe |year=1995 |isbn=978-1-56324-356-1 |editor-last=Bordeaux |editor-first=Michael |series=International Politics in Eurasia |volume=3 |location=Armonk |pages=237–238 |chapter=Religion and Politics in the Caucauses |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/politicsofreligi0000unse/page/228/ |url-access=registration}}|5={{Cite book |last=Ozhiganov |first=Edward |title=Managing Conflict in the Former Soviet Union: Russian and American Perspectives |publisher=MIT Press |year=1997 |isbn=978-1-56324-356-1 |editor-last=Arbatov |editor-first=Alexei |location=Cambridge |pages=388 |chapter=The Republic of Georgia: Conflict in Abkhazia and South Ossetia |editor-last2=Chayes |editor-first2=Abram |editor-last3=Chayes |editor-first3=Antonia Handler |editor-last4=Olson |editor-first4=Lara}}|6={{Cite book |url=https://freedomhouse.org/sites/default/files/2020-02/Freedom_in_the_World_1997-1998_complete_book.pdf |title=Freedom in the World: The Annual Survey of Political Rights & Civil Liberties, 1997–1998 |publisher=] |year=1998 |isbn=978-0-7658-0476-1 |editor-last=Kaplan |editor-first=Roger |location=Washington D.C. |pages=564 |editor-last2=Karatnycky |editor-first2=Adrian}}|7={{Cite book |last=Cornell |first=Svante |author-link=Svante Cornell |title=Small Nations and Great Powers: A Study of Ethnopolitical Conflict in the Caucasus |publisher=Curzon |year=2001 |isbn=978-0-7007-1162-8 |location=London |pages=174}}|8=}}</ref> also known in Georgia as the '''genocide of Georgians in Abkhazia''' ({{lang-ka|ქართველთა გენოციდი აფხაზეთში|tr}}),<ref name=T.Nadareishvili>{{Cite book |last=Nadareishvili |first=Tamaz |author-link=Tamaz Nadareishvili |title=Genocide in Abkhazia |publisher=Azri Publishers |year=1999 |edition=2nd |location=Tbilisi |oclc=925745970}}</ref> refers to the ],{{sfn|Anderson|Hammond|1995|p=23}} massacres,<ref>{{Cite book |last=Walker |first=Edward |title=Crossroads and Conflict: Security and Foreign Policy in the Caucasus and Central Asia |publisher=Routledge |year=2000 |editor-last=Bertsch |editor-first=Gary K. |location=New York |chapter=No War, No Peace in the Caucasus: Contested Sovereignty in Chechnya, Abkhazia, and Karabakh |editor-last2=Craft |editor-first2=Cassady |editor-last3=Jones |editor-first3=Scott A. |editor-last4=Beck |editor-first4=Michael |page=161 |isbn=978-1-136-68445-6}}</ref> and forced mass expulsion of thousands of ethnic ] living in ] during both the ] and ] Wars of Abkhazia by ] ] and their allies.<ref name=Mirsky>{{Cite book |last=Mirsky |first=Georgiy I. |title=On Ruins of Empire: Ethnicity and Nationalism in the Former Soviet Union |publisher=Greenwood Press |year=1997 |isbn=978-0-313-30044-8 |location=Westport |pages=72–73}}</ref><ref name=CaseGeorgia>{{Cite book |last=Cornell |first=Svante |title=Autonomy and Conflict: Ethnoterritoriality and Separatism in the South Caucasus - Cases in Georgia |publisher=Uppsala University |year=2002 |isbn=978-91-506-1600-2 |pages=180–181}}</ref>{{sfn|Goltz|2006|p=133}} ], ], ], and opposing ] were also killed.{{sfn|Chervonnaya|1994|pp=12-13}}
The '''Ethnic Cleansing of Georgians in Abkhazia''',<ref> Budapest Declaration and Geneva Declaration on Ethnic Cleansing of Georgians in Abkhazia between 1992-1993 adopted by the OSCE and recognized as ethnic cleansing in 1994 and 1999 </ref><ref>
The Human Rights Field Operation: Law, Theory and Practice, Abkhazia Case, Michael O'Flaherty </ref><ref>The Politics of Religion in Russia and the New States of Eurasia, Michael Bourdeaux, p. 237 </ref><ref>Managing Conflict in the Former Soviet Union: Russian and American Perspectives,
Alekseĭ Georgievich Arbatov, p. 388 </ref><ref>On Ruins of Empire: Ethnicity and Nationalism in the Former Soviet Union Georgiy I. Mirsky, p. 72 </ref><ref></ref> also known as '''Genocide of Georgians in Abkhazia''' (according to the Georgian side and by a number of western scholars)<ref>Human Rights Watch World Report 1997, Human Rights Watch (Organization), Human Rights Watch Staff, p. 220 </ref><ref>Federalism and Decentralization: Perspectives for the Transformation Process in Eastern and Central Europe, Jürgen Rose Johannes Ch Traut, the George C. Marshall European Center for Security Studies write on p 352 </ref><ref></ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Georgia's U.N. ambassador accuses Russia of genocide in Abkhazia |url=http://newsfromrussia.com/world/2006/02/02/72217.html |work=] |date=], ] |archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20060209001850/http://newsfromrussia.com/world/2006/02/02/72217.html |archivedate=2006-02-09}}</ref> ({{Lang-ka|ქართველთა გენოციდი აფხაზეთში}}) or the '''Massacres of Georgians in Abkhazia'''<ref>Chervonnaia, Svetlana Mikhailovna. ''Conflict in the Caucasus: Georgia, Abkhazia, and the Russian Shadow.'' Gothic Image Publications, 1994.</ref><ref>Small Nations and Great Powers: A Study of Ethnopolitical Conflict in the Soviet Union, Svante E. Cornell </ref> — refers to ],<ref> Human Rights Watch Helsinki, Vol 7, No 7, March 1995, p 230 </ref> massacres<ref>Crossroads and Conflict: Security and Foreign Policy in the Caucasus and Central Asia, Gary K. Bertsch, Page 161 </ref> and forced mass expulsion of thousands of ethnic ] living in ] (] Autonomous Republic of ]) during the ] of ]-] and ]. Between 10,000 to 30,000<ref>Federalism and Decentralization: Perspectives for the Transformation Process in Eastern and Central Europe, Jürgen Rose Johannes Ch Traut, the George C. Marshall European Center for Security Studies write on p 352 </ref> Georgians were killed by the ], foreign mercenaries, and, allegedly, by ].<ref>On Ruins of Empire: Ethnicity and Nationalism in the Former Soviet Union Georgiy I. Mirsky, p. 72 </ref> Local ], ], ] and moderate ] were also killed.<ref name="chervonnaia">Conflict in the Caucasus: Georgia, Abkhazia, and the Russian Shadow by S. A. Chervonnaia and Svetlana Mikhailovna Chervonnaia, pp 12-13 </ref> In addition, roughly 230,000 to 250,000 Georgian civilians were expelled from their homes.<ref name="hrwreport"> </ref>


In 2007, 267,345 Georgian civilians were registered as ]s (IDPs).<ref name=abkhaziatoday>{{Cite report |url=https://www.crisisgroup.org/sites/default/files/176-abkhazia-today.pdf |title=Abkhazia Today |date=2006-09-15 |publisher=International Crisis Group |issue=176 |access-date=2024-12-21}}</ref>
The ethnic cleansing and massacres of Georgians has been officially recognized by the OSCE conventions in 1994, 1996 and again in 1997 during the ], ] and ] summits and condemned the “''perpetrators of war crimes committed during the conflict''.”<ref> , '']'', ]</ref> On May 15 2008, ] ] adopted a resolution (GA/10708) which acknowledges the ethnic cleansing campaign which have been described by OSCE conventions, and strongly emphasizes the return of all Georgian ]s (IDPs) back to Abkhazia, protection of their property rights and full restoration of the pre-war population.<ref></ref>
The ethnic cleansing and massacres of Georgians have been officially recognized by ] (OSCE) conventions in 1994, 1996, and 1999 during the ], ], and ] summits, which condemned the "perpetrators of war crimes committed during the conflict."<ref name=budapest>{{Cite web |date=1994-12-21 |title=CSCE: Budapest Document 1994 |url=https://www.osce.org/files/f/documents/5/1/39554.pdf |access-date=2024-12-21 |website=Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe |quote=The participating States expressed their concern about the unilateral acts of 26 November 1994 by the authorities of Abkhazia... hey expressed their deep concern over 'ethnic cleansing'...}}</ref><ref name=libson>{{Cite web |date=1996-12-03 |title=OSCE: Lisbon Summit 1996 |url=https://www.osce.org/files/f/documents/1/0/39539.pdf |access-date=2024-12-21 |website=Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe |quote=We condemn the ‘ethnic cleansing’ resulting in mass destruction and forcible expulsion of predominantly Georgian population in Abkhazia.}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2000-01-01 |title=OSCE: Istanbul Document 1999 |url=https://www.osce.org/files/f/documents/6/5/39569.pdf |access-date=2024-12-21 |website=Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe |quote=We reiterate our strong condemnation as formulated in the Budapest and Lisbon Summit Documents, of the “ethnic cleansing” resulting in mass destruction and forcible expulsion of predominantly Georgian population in Abkhazia, Georgia, and of the violent acts in May 1998 in the Gali region.}}</ref>
{{see also|Cases before the International Criminal Court#Georgia}}


On 15 May 2008, the ] adopted (by 14 votes to 11, with 105 abstentions) resolution A/RES/62/249, which "mphasizes the importance of preserving the property rights of refugees and internally displaced persons from Abkhazia, Georgia, including victims of reported "ethnic cleansing," and calls upon all the Member States to deter persons under their jurisdiction from obtaining property within the territory of Abkhazia, Georgia in violation of the rights of returnees."<ref></ref> The UN Security Council passed a series of resolutions in which it appealed for a cease-fire.<ref name=cop>{{Cite book |last=Coppieters |first=Bruno |title=Commonwealth and Independence in Post-Soviet Eurasia |publisher=Frank Cass |year=1998 |isbn=978-0-7146-4480-6 |editor-last=Coppieters |editor-first=Bruno |location=Portland |chapter=Georgia in Europe: The Idea of a Periphery in International Relations |editor-last2=Zverev |editor-first2=Alexei |editor-last3=Trenin |editor-first3=Dmitri |page=61}}</ref>
The ] is currently investigating allegations of ] and ] in Abkhazia.<ref></ref> The ICC was provided with the documents selected from the 300 volumes of evidence about the genocide of Georgians in Abkhazia. These materials were collected by the Georgian Prosecutors' Office beginning in 1993 and allegedly contain horrific accounts of atrocities committed by the Abkhaz fighters and mercenaries from Russia.<ref>The Jamestown Foundation, Volume 1, Issue 57 (July 22, 2004), </ref> The reports included a detailed description of how the separatists played soccer with the heads of dead Georgians on the field after the executions in Gagra.<ref>Murphy, Paul J. (2004), ''The Wolves of Islam: Russia and the Faces of Chechen Terror'', page 15. Brassey's, ISBN 1574888307</ref>


==Background== ==Background==
===Military conflict in Abkhazia=== {{see also|Demographics of Abkhazia}}
Prior to the ], Georgians made up nearly half of Abkhazia's population, while less than one-fifth of the population was ]. In contrast, in 1926, the two populations had been nearly balanced at around one-third each, with Russians, Armenians, and Greeks constituting the remainder. Large-scale immigration of Georgians, Russians, and Armenians allowed their respective populations to balloon; while the Abkhaz population had not even doubled by 1989, the Georgian population had nearly quadrupled from 67,494 to 239,872, the Armenian population had tripled, and the Russian population had sextupled.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Kolossov |first1=Vladimir |last2=O'Loughlin |first2=John |year=2011 |title=After the Wars in the South Caucasus State of Georgia: Economic Insecurities and Migration in the "De Facto" States of Abkhazia and South Ossetia |journal=Eurasian Geography and Economics |volume=52 |issue=5 |page=634 |doi=10.2747/1539-7216.52.5.631 |s2cid=154652086}}</ref><ref name=censuses> {{in lang|ru}}</ref>
:''See also ]''


===Abkhazia conflict===
{{cquote|''The Georgians can live here no longer, in Abkhazia they can only die''.<ref>Quote by Vitaliy Smyr, "Komsomolskaya Pravda" December 19, 1992</ref><ref>Conflict in the Caucasus: Georgia, Abkhazia and the Russian Shadow, Svetlana Chervonnaya, Great Britain: Gothic Image Publications, 1994, p.43</ref> }}
{{See also|Abkhazia conflict}}
The ] largely began in July 1989 with the ]. In order to defuse tensions, Georgian President ] agreed on an arrangement to grant a wide over-representation to Abkhazians in the local ], with Abkhazians, while being only 18% of the population, getting the largest portion of seats.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Donnacha |first=Beachain |year=2012 |title=The dynamics of electoral politics in Abkhazia |url=https://abkhazworld.com/aw/Pdf/Dynamics_of_Electoral_Politics_in_Abkhazia_Donnacha_O_Beachain.pdf |journal=Communist and Post-Communist Studies |publisher=Elsevier |volume=45 |issue=1–2 |pages=165–174 |doi=10.1016/j.postcomstud.2012.03.008 |url-access=registration}}</ref> A two-thirds
majority was to be required to pass "important legislation" to ensure that key decisions would not be taken without approval from both Abkhaz and Georgian deputies and each side would hold veto power in principle.<ref name="stuart"/> The ] were held in September and October 1991. However, the power-sharing agreement soon proved to be unsustainable and broke down.<ref name="wheatley"/>


Ethnic Abkhaz ] was elected Chairman of the Supreme Soviet of Abkhazia. Ardzinba, who was a charismatic but excitable figure popular among the Abkhaz, was believed by Georgians to have helped to instigate the ].<ref name="stuart">{{Cite book |last=Kaufman |first=Stuart J. |title=Modern Hatreds: The Symbolic Politics of Ethnic War |publisher=Cornell University Press |year=2001 |isbn=978-0-8014-8736-1 |location=Ithaca |pages=116}}</ref> Ardzinba managed to consolidate his power relatively quickly and reneged on pre-election promises to increase the representation of Georgians in Abkhazia's autonomous structures; since then, Ardzinba tried to rule Abkhazia relatively single-handedly, but avoided, for the time being, overt conflict with the central authorities in ]. However, Ardzinba created the Abkhazian National Guard that was mono-ethnically Abkhaz, and initiated a practice of replacing ethnic Georgians in leading positions with Abkhaz.<ref name=CaseGeorgia /> On 24 June 1992, the Abkhaz armed formations attacked the building of Abkhazian Ministry of Internal Affairs, beat up and forcibly removed ethnic Georgian minister Givi Lominadze from office, replacing him with ethnic Abkhaz ], without the consent of Georgian deputies.<ref name="wheatley">{{cite book |last=Wheatley |first=Jonathan |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dGqLAAAAMAAJ |title=Georgia from National Awakening to Rose Revolution |publisher=Ashgate Publishing |year=2005 |isbn=978-0-7546-4503-0 |location=Farnham |page=71}}</ref> After this, on 30 June, Georgian deputies of the Supreme Soviet organized a walk-out and began boycotting the Soviet.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Potier |first=Tim |title=Conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh, Abkhazia and South Ossetia: A Legal Appraisal |publisher=Kluwer Law International |year=2001 |isbn=978-90-411-1477-8 |location=The Hague |page=11}}</ref>
The 1994 U.S. State Department Country Reports describes scenes of massive human rights abuse, which Human Rights Watch supported based on their own evidence:


The political situation in Abkhazia changed into a military confrontation between the Georgian government and Abkhaz separatists. The fighting escalated as ], along with police units, took ] and came near the city of ]. The ethnically based policies initiated by the Georgians in Sukhumi simultaneously created refugees and a core of fighters determined to regain lost homes.{{sfn|Anderson|Hammond|1995|p=23}} However, as the war progressed, the Abkhaz separatists carried out similar policies of violent displacement of ethnic Georgians in greater proportions, which saw 250,000 people forcefully evicted from their homes.<ref name="Russia p 27">
{{quotation|The separatist forces committed widespread atrocities against the Georgian civilian population, killing many women, children, and elderly, capturing some as hostages and torturing others ... they also killed large numbers of Georgian civilians who remained behind in Abkhaz-seized territory...
{{Cite book |editor-last=Cornell |editor-first=Svante |last=Goltz |first=Thomas |title=The Guns of August 2008: Russia's War in Georgia |editor-last2=Starr |editor-first2=S. Frederick |publisher=M.E. Sharpe |year=2009 |isbn=978-0-7656-2942-5 |location=Armonk |page=27 |chapter=The Paradox of Living in Paradise: Georgia's Descent into Chaos}}</ref> Using aid allegedly provided by Russia, the separatists managed to re-arm and organize militants from North Caucasus. According to political analyst Georgy Mirsky, the Russian military base in Gudauta was, "supplying the Abkhazian side with weapons and ammunition."<ref name=Mirsky /> Furthermore, he adds that "no direct proof of this has ever been offered, but it would be more naïve to believe that the tanks, rockets, howitzers, pieces of ordnance, and other heavy weapons that the anti-Georgian coalition forces were increasing using in their war had been captured from the enemy."<ref name=Mirsky />
<br>
===Perpetrators===
<br>
<!-- Personally think this could be expanded into its own section -->The anti-Georgian military coalition was made up of the ], ]'s "Grey Wolf" Chechen division, the Armenian ], ], militants from ], and various Russian special units.{{sfn|Goltz|2006|p=133}}<ref>{{Cite book |last=Croissant |first=Michael P. |title=Oil and Geopolitics in the Caspian Sea Region |publisher=Praeger |year=1999 |isbn=978-0-275-96395-8 |editor-last=Croissant |editor-first=Michael P. |location=Westport |pages=279 |chapter=Georgia: Bridge or Barrier for Caspian Oil? |editor-last2=Aras |editor-first2=Bülent}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Smith |first=Sebastian |url=https://archive.org/details/allahsmountainsb0000smit/page/102/ |title=Allah's Mountains: The Battle for Chechnya |publisher=I.B. Tauris |year=2001 |isbn=978-1-86064-651-5 |edition=revised |location=London |pages=102 |url-access=registration}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Jackson |first=Nicole J. |title=Russian Foreign Policy and the CIS: Theories, Debates and Actions |publisher=Routledge |year=2003 |isbn=978-0-415-30577-8 |location=Abingdon-on-Thames |page=122}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last1=Baran |first1=Zeyno |last2=de Waal |first2=Thomas |date=2006-08-02 |title=Abkhazia-Georgia, Kosovo-Serbia: parallel worlds? |url=http://www.opendemocracy.net/democracy-caucasus/abkhazia_serbia_3787.jsp |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160405100213/https://www.opendemocracy.net/democracy-caucasus/abkhazia_serbia_3787.jsp |archive-date=2016-04-05 |access-date=2008-10-17 |website=openDemocracy}}</ref>
The separatists launched a reign of terror against the majority Georgian population, although other nationalities also suffered. Chechens and other north Caucasians from the Russian Federation reportedly joined local Abkhaz troops in the commission of atrocities... Those fleeing Abkhazia made highly credible claims of atrocities, including the killing of civilians without regard for age or sex. Corpses recovered from Abkhaz-held territory showed signs of extensive torture<ref name=SDHR>SDHR. State Department, Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 1993, February 1994 </ref>}}


], one of the leaders of the Confederation of Mountain Peoples of the Caucasus, said during his speech to the militants from said organization in 1992:
In 1992, the political situation in Abkhazia changed into the military confrontation between Georgian government and Abkhaz separatists. The fighting escalated as ] along with police units took ] and came near the city of ]. The ethnically-based policies initiated by the Georgians in Sukhumi created simultaneously refugees and a core of fighters determined to regain lost homes.<ref>Human Rights Watch report. , page 23. Published in March, 1995 </ref> Under the alleged aid from Russia, they managed to re-arm and organize “volunteer battalions” from North Caucasus. In early 1991, Abkhaz separatist forces and their allies started their counterattack on Georgian held-positions. Abkhazia was known for its multi-ethnic population, which included ] (46% in 1989), ], ], ], ], ], etc. Ethnic Georgians living in Abkhazia started to organize their own battalions and resistance movements which inflicted a significant blow to the separatist advance.
Confronted with approximately 300,000<ref> Federal Practice: Exploring Alternatives for Georgia and Abkhazia by Bruno Coppieters</ref> ethnic Georgians who were unwilling to leave their homes, Abkhaz side implemented the process of ] in order to expel and eliminate the Georgian ethnic population in Abkhazia.<ref> US State Department, Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 1993, February 1994, pp. 120 </ref>


{{Blockquote|text=Our enemy must see how we're uniting and gaining strength. We need to thoroughly consider our operations and evaluate small, yet important facts. We need to act professionally. We need to quickly learn how to kill, hack, cut off noses, etc.<ref></ref>{{better source needed|reason=I wouldn't be surprised if it's true but a random video is still not a reliable source|date=October 2024}}}}
The estimated total number of killed in the process of ethnic cleansing ranges from 10,000 to 30,000,<ref>Federal Practice: Exploring Alternatives for Georgia and Abkhazia by Bruno Coppieters, p. 32 </ref> which does not include the numbers of missing, wounded and tortured people. Roughly 230,000 to 250,000 ethnic Georgians were expelled from their homes.<ref name="hrwreport"/> The campaign ethnic cleansing also included Russians, Armenians, Greeks, moderate Abkhaz and other minor ethnic groups living in Abkhazia. More than 20,000 houses owned by ethnic Georgians were destroyed. Hundreds of Schools, kindergartens, churches, hospitals, historical monuments were pillaged and destroyed.<ref name="chervonnaia" />


==Ethnic cleansing (1992–1993)==
After the end of the war, the government of ], ], ] and ], as well as the refugees themselves, began to investigate and gather facts about the allegations of ], ] and deportation which was conducted by the Abkhaz side during the conflict.
Confronted with hundreds of thousands of ethnic Georgians unwilling to leave their homes, the Abkhaz side implemented a process of ] to expel and eliminate the ethnic Georgian population in Abkhazia.<ref name=country>{{Cite book |chapter-url=https://www.refworld.org/reference/annualreport/usdos/1994/en/39753 |title=Country Reports on Human Rights Practices in 1993 |publisher=US Government Printing Office |year=1994 |isbn=978-0-16-043627-7 |location=Washington D.C. |chapter=Georgia}}</ref>
In 1994 and again in 1996 the OSCE during the Budapest summit gave its official recognition of ethnic cleansing of Georgians in Abkhazia and condemned the “perpetrators of war crimes committed during the conflict.”<ref> From the Resolution of the OSCE Budapest Summit, December 6, 1994 </ref>


The exact number of those killed during the ethnic cleansing is disputed. According to Georgian data, 5,000 civilians were killed and 400 were missing.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Gamakharia |first1=Jemal |title=INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY TO BRING A VERDICT ON THE TRAGEDY OF ABKHAZIA/GEORGIA |date=2015 |isbn=978-9941-461-12-5 |page=7 |publisher=Khvicha Kardava |url=http://dspace.nplg.gov.ge/bitstream/1234/117908/1/Genocidi.pdf |access-date=31 January 2021}}</ref> Roughly 200,000 to 250,000 ethnic Georgians were expelled from their homes.<ref name="abkhaziatoday" /> The campaign of ethnic cleansing also affected Russians, Armenians, Greeks, some Abkhaz, and other minor ethnic groups living in Abkhazia. More than 20,000 houses owned by ethnic Georgians were destroyed. Hundreds of schools, kindergartens, churches, hospitals, and historical monuments were pillaged and destroyed.{{sfn|Chervonnaya|1994|pp=12-13}}{{sfn|Anderson|Hammond|1995|p=22}}
On March 2006, the Hague War Crimes Tribunal announced that it had reviewed all the documents submitted by the Georgian side. After a full-scale investigation, the Tribunal concluded that it would prosecute and start hearings against the campaign of ethnic cleansing, war-crimes and terror inflicted on ethnic Georgians in Abkhazia.<ref>The conflict in Abkhazia: dilemmas in Russian 'peacekeeping' policy, Lynch, Dov, pp 36-37 </ref><ref>Challenges to peacebuilding : managing spoilers during conflict resolution
Newman Edward, p 282 </ref>


The 1994 U.S. State Department Country Report describes scenes of massive human rights abuse, which is supported by the findings of Human Rights Watch. According to U.S. State Department Country Report on Conflict in Abkhazia (Georgia):
{{quotation|A terrible find has been made by the local residents of the mountains of Abkhazia, near the spot where clashes with the sea-born landing troops (attempting to cut the Ochamchire-Sokhumi highway) had taken place..Pieces of a human body were hanging on long wires from tree..Those were remains of two skinned Georgian men..It is not only soldiers that are killed. In the same woods, near one village there I found a corpse of a pregnant Georgian women. She had been raped and disemboweled<ref name=DKholodov>DKholodov. Dmitry Kholodov, Moscow journalist covering the Conflict, 1992 </ref>}}


{{quotation|The separatist forces committed widespread atrocities against the Georgian civilian population, killing many women, children, and elderly, capturing some as hostages and torturing others&nbsp;... they also killed large numbers of Georgian civilians who remained behind in Abkhaz-seized territory&nbsp;...
== Facts of ethnic cleansing (1992-1993)==


The separatists launched a reign of terror against the majority Georgian population, although other nationalities also suffered. Chechens and other north Caucasians from the Russian Federation reportedly joined local Abkhaz troops in the commission of atrocities&nbsp;... Those fleeing Abkhazia made highly credible claims of atrocities, including the killing of civilians without regard for age or sex. Corpses recovered from Abkhaz-held territory showed signs of extensive torture<ref name=country/>
Following are few examples taken from the Helsinki Human Rights Watch Reports and documentation submitted for the review to United Nations and Hague War Crimes Tribunal.


After the end of the war, the ], the ], the ] (OSCE), and the refugees began to investigate and gather facts about the allegations of ], ], and deportation conducted by the Abkhaz side during the conflict.
===Fall of Gagra===
In 1994 and again in 1996, OSCE officially recognized the ethnic cleansing of Georgians in Abkhazia and condemned the "perpetrators of war crimes committed during the conflict."<ref name=budapest/><ref name=libson/>
{{main|Battle of Gagra}}


According to Catherine Dale from ]:
On September 3, 1992, the Russian mediated agreement was signed between Georgian and Abkhaz separatist sides which obliged Georgia to withdraw its military forces from the city of Gagra. The agreement forced Abkhaz separatists from Gudauta to hold their attacks on the city. Soon after, the Georgian forces which included ], Avaza and White Eagle battalions (along with their tanks and heavy artillery) left the city. Only small pockets of armed groups (made up of volunteers units of the ethnic Georgians of Gagra) remained. However, on October 1, the Abkhaz side violated the agreement and launched a full scale attack on Gagra. The attack was well coordinated and mainly carried out by the Chechen (under the command of ]) and North Caucasian militants. Meantime in Gagra, Georgian small detachments lost the control of the city suburbs (Leselidze and Kolkhida) and eventually were destroyed in the city center by the end of October 1st. With the fall of the city, the Georgian population of Gagra was captured by the separatists and their allies. The first major massacres and ethnic-cleansing were committed during the fall of Gagra.<ref> Human Rights Watch Report, First draft made in December 1993 and submitted to Helsinki office.</ref>


{{quotation| In a former tourist camp in Kutaisi, a large gathering of displaced people tell of the "common practice" called the "]", in which the tongue is cut out of the throat and tied around the neck. A woman tells of a man being ] his teenage daughter, and of Abkhaz soldiers having sex with dead bodies. A man tells how in Gudauta, Abkhaz killed small children and then cut off their heads to play football with them. These themes are repeated in many separate accounts.<ref name=C.Dale>{{Cite journal |last=Dale |first=Catherine |date=September 1997 |title=The Dynamics and Challenges of Ethnic Cleansing: The Georgia-Abkhazia Case |journal=Refugee Study Quarterly |volume=16 |issue=3 |pages=77–109 |doi=10.1093/rsq/16.3.77}}</ref>}}
People of all ages were rounded up from Gagra, Leselidze, Kolkhida and killed. When the separatist militants entered the city, civilians became a target of mass murder. The main targets were young people and children. According to the witness account: ''"When I returned home I was surprised to see a lot of armed people on the street. They were quiet. I mistook one of them for my Georgian neighbour, and I said, "How are you?" in Georgian. He grabbed me by the wrist and said, "Keep quiet." I wasn’t afraid for myself; I thought they had killed my family. He asked me in Russian, "Where are your young people? We won’t kill you, we’ll kill them." I said they weren’t here, that there were only old people left."''<ref>Human Rights Watch report. , page 26. Published in March, 1995 </ref>
Women and young girls captured by the militants became the victims of rape and torture. One elderly Georgian woman who lived through the October attack in Gagra recounted the following: ''"They brought over a blind man and his brother, who always stayed with him. They began to beat the blind man, his brother and his wife with a gun butt, calling him "dog!" and kicking him. He fell over. I saw blood. One soldier said: "We won’t kill you, but where are the young girls?" I said there weren’t any."''<ref>Human Rights Watch report. , page 27. Published in March, 1995 </ref>


The Human Rights Watch report drafted in 1995 included a detailed account of the war crimes and atrocities committed during the war. It concludes that "Human Rights Watch finds Abkhaz forces responsible for the foreseeable wave of revenge, human rights abuse, and war crimes that were unleashed on the Georgian population in Sukhumi and other parts of Abkhazia. In Human Rights Watch's judgment, these practices were indeed encouraged in order to drive the Georgian population from its homes."{{sfn|Anderson|Hammond|1995|p=23}}
{{quotation|My husband Sergo was dragged and tied to a tree. An Abkhaz woman named Zoya Tsvizba brought a tray with lots of salt on it. She took the knife and started to inflict wounds on my husband. After that, she threw salt on to my husbands exposed wounds. They tortured him like that for ten minutes. After, they forced a young Georgian boy (they killed him afterwards) to dig a hole with the tractor. They placed my husband in this hole and buried him alive. The only thing I remember him saying before he was covered with the gravel and sand was: “Dali take care of the kids!"<ref name=S.Chervonnaia>S.Chervonnaia.Chervonnaia, Svetlana Mikhailovna. Conflict in the Caucasus: Georgia, Abkhazia, and the Russian Shadow. Gothic Image Publications, 1994</ref>}}


{{cquote|The Georgian command wanted to make a Blitzkrieg in Abkhazia&nbsp; But not everything is decided by tanks and Grads. The Abkhazians don't have any other land, and we have no way to go. But also the Georgians can live here no longer. In Abkhazia, they can only die. (Vitaliy Smyr, 1992) <ref> "Quote by Vitaliy Smyr". Komsomolskaya Pravda. 1992-12-19. p. 2.</ref>{{vn|date=December 2024}} }}
After the fall of Gagra, the victors started to pillage, rape, and torture followed by summary executions of everyone who was captured and failed to flee the city in time. At 5:00 pm on October 1, civilians (approximately 1000-1500 people) were rounded up and placed under the guard at the soccer stadium in downtown Gagra. On October 6, close to 50 civilians had been found hanging on electricity poles. Soon after, children, elderly, women and men who were detained on the soccer stadium were gunned down and dumped in mass graves not far from the stadium.


Below are a few examples taken from the Helsinki Human Rights Watch Reports, as well as documentation submitted for review to the United Nations and the Hague War Crimes Tribunal.
A Russian military observer Mikhail Demianov (who was accused by the Georgian side of being the military advisor to the separatist leader Ardzinba) told Human Rights Watch:


===Fall of Gagra===
{{quotation|When they entered Gagra, I saw ] battalion. I have never seen such a horror. They were raping and killing everyone who was captured and dragged from their homes. The Abkhaz commander Arshba raped a 14 year old girl and later gave an order to execute her. For the whole day I only could hear the screams and cries of the people who were brutally tortured. On the next day, I witnessed the mass execution of people on the stadium. They installed machine guns and mortars on the top and placed people right on the field. It took a couple of hours to kill everybody<ref name=HRWI>HRWI. Human Rights Watch Interview, GL87650 Abkhazia, 1995</ref>}}
{{Main|Battle of Gagra}}
On 3 September 1992, the Russian-mediated agreement was signed between Georgian and Abkhaz separatist sides, which obliged Georgia to withdraw its military forces from the city of ]. The agreement forced Abkhaz separatists from Gudauta to hold their attacks on the city. Soon after, the Georgian forces, which included ], Avaza, and White Eagle battalions (along with their tanks and heavy artillery), left the city. Only small pockets of armed groups (made up of volunteer units of the ethnic Georgians of Gagra) remained. However, on October 1, the Abkhaz side violated the agreement and launched a full-scale attack on Gagra. The attack was well coordinated and mainly carried out by the Chechen (under the command of ]) and North Caucasian militants. Meantime in Gagra, small Georgian detachments lost control of the city suburbs (Leselidze and Kolkhida) and were destroyed in the city center by the end of October 1. With the fall of Gagra, the Georgian population was captured by the separatists and their allies. The first significant massacres and ethnic cleansings were committed during the fall of Gagra.{{sfn|Anderson|Hammond|1995|p=22}}


People of all ages were rounded up from Gagra, Leselidze, and Kolkhida and killed. When the separatist militants entered the city, civilians became a target of mass murder. The main targets were young people and children. According to the witness account:
UN observers started to investigate and gather all the facts concerning the war crimes during the fall of Gagra. The blame for cutting the heads off the dead was placed on Shamyl Basaev’s battalion. Deputy Chairman of the Supreme Council of Abkhazia Mikhail Jinjaradze was dragged out from his office and executed.
:"When I returned home I was surprised to see a lot of armed people on the street. They were quiet. I mistook one of them for my Georgian neighbour, and I said, "How are you?" in Georgian. He grabbed me by the wrist and said, "Keep quiet." I wasn't afraid for myself; I thought they had killed my family. He asked me in Russian, "Where are your young people? We won't kill you, we'll kill them." I said they weren't here, that there were only old people left."{{sfn|Anderson|Hammond|1995|p=26}}
Women and young girls captured by the militants became the victims of rape and torture. One elderly Georgian woman who lived through the October attack in Gagra recounted the following: "They brought over a blind man and his brother, who always stayed with him. They began to beat the blind man, his brother and his wife with a gun butt, calling him "dog!" and kicking him. He fell over. I saw blood. One soldier said: "We won't kill you, but where are the young girls?" I said there weren't any."{{sfn|Anderson|Hammond|1995|p=27}}


"My husband Sergo was dragged and tied to a tree. An Abkhaz woman named Zoya Tsvizba brought a tray with lots of salt on it. She took the knife and started to inflict wounds on my husband. After that, she threw salt onto my husband's exposed wounds. They tortured him like that for ten minutes. Afterwards, they forced a young Georgian boy (they killed him afterwards) to dig a hole with the tractor. They placed my husband in this hole and buried him alive. The only thing I remember him saying before he was covered with the gravel and sand was: 'Dali, take care of the kids!'"{{sfn|Chervonnaya|1994|p= {{pn|date=December 2024}} }}<ref>{{Cite book |title=Caucasus and an Unholy Alliance |publisher=Kirja-Leitzinger |year=1997 |isbn=978-952-9752-16-4 |editor-last=Leitzinger |editor-first=Antero |location=Vantaa |pages=120}}</ref>
{{quotation|The Abkhaz separatists killed people of other nationalities as well, including those who tried to protect Georgians. After the city was seized, the streets were covered with bodies. Separatists destroyed the Baramidze, Chkhetia, Baramia, Gvazava, Dzidziguri, Absandze, Shonia, and Kutsia families, as well as many others<ref name=LOA>LOA. Labirinth of Abkhazia by Vakhtang Kolbaia, p 34, 1999</ref>}}


After the fall of Gagra, the victors began to pillage, rape, and torture, followed by ]s of everyone who was captured and failed to flee the city in time. At 5:00 pm on October 1, approximately 1000–1500 civilians were rounded up and placed under guard at the soccer stadium in downtown Gagra. On October 6, close to 50 civilians were found hanging on electricity poles. Soon after, children, elderly, women, and men who were detained at the soccer stadium were gunned down and dumped in mass graves not far from the stadium.
===Massacre in Kamani===
{{main|Kamani massacre}}
]
After the failed attempt of the separatist forces and their allies to storm Sukhumi on March 14th, 1993, Abkhaz diverted their main forces to the northern side of the front line which divided Georgian held Sukhumi and separatist controlled territories. On July 4, the Confederation of Mountain Peoples of the Caucasus militia, Abkhaz formations, and Armenian ] transported by allegedly Russian naval forces to the city of ] began their offensive on the northern Sukhumi district. Georgian forces and local volunteer units stationed in the villages of ], ] and ] were taken by surprise. On July 5, after intensive fighting, Georgians lost as many as 500 people in a couple of hours.<ref>The Conflict in Abkhazia: Dilemmas in Russian 'Peacekeeping' Policy by Dov Lynch </ref> The village of Kamani fell into the hands of separatist formations and their North Caucasian allies. Kamani was populated mainly by ] (a sub-ethnic group of the Georgian people) and by ] ] who had been living in the church of ] located in the center of the village.<ref>Conflict in the Caucasus: Georgia, Abkhazia, and the Russian Shadow by S. A. Chervonnaia and Svetlana Mikhailovna Chervonnaia, p 51 </ref> The local villagers (including women and children) were massacred while the church of St George became the scene of a blood bath.<ref>Conflict in the Caucasus: Georgia, Abkhazia, and the Russian Shadow by S. A. Chervonnaia and Svetlana Mikhailovna Chervonnaia, p 51 </ref> The nuns were raped and killed in front of the orthodox priests, father Yuri Anua and father Andria. Both priests were taken outside of the church and questioned about the ownership of the land in Abkhazia. After answering that Abkhazia was neither Georgian nor Abkhaz land but God's, they were shot by a confederate soldier. Another priest was killed along with father Yuri Anua and father Andria, an ethnic Abkhaz who was forced to shoot father Andria before he was killed.<ref>Conflict in the Caucasus: Georgia, Abkhazia, and the Russian Shadow by S. A. Chervonnaia and Svetlana Mikhailovna Chervonnaia, p 52 </ref> Approximately, 120 inhabitants of the village were massacred. Similar events took place in the villages of Shroma, ], ], ] and ].<ref>No peace, no war in the Caucasus: Secessionist conflicts in Chechnya, Abkhazia and Nagorno-Karabakh by Edward W Walker </ref>


A Russian military observer Mikhail Demianov (who was accused by the Georgian side of being the military advisor to the separatist leader Ardzinba) told Human Rights Watch:
{{quotation|When the Abkhaz entered my house, they took me and my seven year old son outside. After forcing us to kneel, they took my son and shot him right in front of me. After they grabbed me by hair and took me to the nearby well. An Abkhaz soldier forced me to look down that well; there I saw three younger men and couple of elderly women who were standing soaked in water naked. They were screaming and crying while the Abkhaz were dumping dead corpses on them. Afterwards, they threw a grenade there and placed more people inside. I was forced again to kneel in front of the dead corpses. One of the soldiers took his knife and took the eye out from one of the dead near me. Then he started to rub my lips and face with that decapitated eye. I could not take it any longer and fainted. They left me there in a pile of corpses.<ref name=STD>STD. State Department, Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 1993, February 1994 Chapter 11, p96 </ref>}}


{{quotation|When they entered Gagra, I saw ] battalion. I have never seen such a horror. They were raping and killing everyone who was captured and dragged from their homes. The Abkhaz commander Arshba raped a 14-year-old girl and later gave an order to execute her. For the whole day I only could hear the screams and cries of the people who were brutally tortured. On the next day, I witnessed the mass execution of people on the stadium. They installed machine guns and mortars on the top and placed people right on the field. It took a couple of hours to kill everybody.<ref name="ReferenceB">{{Cite news |last=Hockstader |first=Lee |date=1993-10-21 |title=Atrocities reported after rebel victory in Georgia |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1993/10/22/atrocities-reported-after-rebel-victory-in-georgia/a2f4ee7c-724b-47af-b634-96b13afe8bff/ |access-date=2024-12-20 |newspaper=The Washington Post |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20241219142117/https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1993/10/22/atrocities-reported-after-rebel-victory-in-georgia/a2f4ee7c-724b-47af-b634-96b13afe8bff/ |archive-date=2024-12-19 |url-status=live}}</ref><ref name=HRWI>HRWI. Human Rights Watch Interview, GL87650 Abkhazia, 1995</ref>{{verify source|date=January 2024}}}}
=== Sukhumi ===
{{main|Sukhumi Massacre}}


UN observers started to investigate and gather all the facts concerning the war crimes during the fall of Gagra. The Deputy Chairman of the Supreme Council of Abkhazia, Mikhail Jinjaradze, was dragged out of his office and executed.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Nadareishvili |first=Tamaz |title=Conspiracy Against Georgia |publisher=Merani Publishing |year=2000 |location=Tbilisi |oclc=248540804}}</ref>
{{quotation|The shelling of Sokhumi (by Russians) is the most disgusting thing in this war. All the residents of Sokhumi remember the first shelling. It took place on 2 December 1992. The first rocket fell on Peace Street. They struck at crowded places. The next strategic 'target' was the town market which was hit with great precision. Eighteen people were killed that day. There were always lots of people in the market.<ref name=D.Kholodov>D.Kholodov. Dmitry Kholodov, Moscow journalist covering the Conflict, 1992</ref>}}


===Massacre in Kamani===
On July 27, a similar agreement was signed on September 3, 1992 in Gagra, with Russia and the UN as mediators. Once again Georgians had withdrawn all heavy artillery, tank and significant number of its troops from Sukhumi. The Abkhaz separatists along with their allies were forced by the agreement to hold their advance and heavy bombardment of the city. The Georgian side was reassured by Russia that Sukhumi would not be attacked or bombed if Georgian army would complete its withdrawal. The Georgian troops along with their tanks were evacuated by the Russian military ships to the city of Poti. The city was left without any significant defense. A large number of civilians stayed in Sukhumi and all school were re-opened on September 1st. However, Abkhaz separatists, North Caucasian Volunteers, Cossacks and Russian special forces attacked Sukhumi on September 16th at 8 a.m.
{{Main|Kamani massacre}}
After the failed attempt of the separatist forces and their allies to storm Sukhumi on March 14, 1993, they diverted their main forces to the northern side of the front line, which divided Georgian-held Sukhumi and separatist-controlled territories. On July 4, the ] (CMPC) militia, Abkhaz formations, and the Armenian ], allegedly transported by Russian naval forces to ], began their offensive on the northern Sukhumi district. Georgian forces and local volunteer units (including Ukrainian nationalist organization members (])) stationed in the villages of ], ], and ] were taken by surprise. On July 5, after intensive fighting, the Georgians lost as many as 500 people in a couple of hours.{{sfn|Lynch|1998|p= {{pn|date=December 2024}} }}{{bettersourceneeded|reason=discussion paper that wasn't published in a scholarly journal|date=July 2024}} The village of Kamani fell into the hands of separatist formations and their North Caucasian allies. Kamani was populated mainly by ] (a sub-ethnic group of the Georgian people) and ] ] who had been living in the church of ] in the center of the village. The local villagers (including women and children) were massacred, while the church of St George became the scene of a blood bath. The nuns were raped and killed before the Orthodox priests, father Yuri Anua and father Andria. Both priests were taken outside of the church and questioned about the land ownership in Abkhazia. After answering that Abkhazia was neither Georgian nor Abkhaz land but God's, they were shot by a confederate soldier. Another priest, an ethnic Abkhaz who was forced to shoot father Andria, was killed.{{sfn|Chervonnaya|1994|pp=51-52}} Approximately 120 inhabitants of the village were massacred.


===Fall of Sukhumi===
It marked the beginning of 12 days non-stop fighting around the besieged Sukhumi with intensive fighting and human loss from the both sides. Georgians who stayed in the city with some weapons were left without any defense from artillery or mechanized units. The union of theater actors of Sukhumi joined fighting along with other civilians who decided to fight. The city was mercilessly bombed by Russian air forces and separatist artillery. On September 27, the city fell as Abkhaz, ] (CMPC) and Russian units stormed the House of the Government of Abkhazia. One of the most horrific massacres of this war was waged on the civilian population of Sukhumi after its downfall. During the storming of the city, close to 1,000 people perished as Abkhaz formations overran the streets of the city. The civilians who were trapped in the city were taken from their houses, basements and apartment building.
], a war correspondent who visited Abkhazia during the war, recalls that Russian ]s dropped 500 kilograms of ] which mainly targeted the residential areas of Sukhumi and villages on Gumista River.{{sfn|Goltz|2006|p=139}} The Russian journalist ] remained in Sukhumi before it fell to separatists and wrote a couple of reports from the besieged city,


{{quotation|The shelling of Sokhumi is the most disgusting thing in this war&nbsp;... All the residents of Sokhumi remember the first shelling. It took place on 2 December 1992. The first rocket fell on Peace Street. They struck at crowded places. The next strategic 'target' was the town market which was hit with great precision. Eighteen people were killed that day. There were always lots of people in the market.<ref>D. Kholodov. "Moskovskiy komsomolets", July 29, 1993, p.3</ref>}}
Russian journalist Dmitry Kholodov:<ref>Dmitry Kholodov, Moscow journalist covering the Conflict, 1992 </ref>


On July 27, 1993, a Russian-brokered trilateral agreement on a ceasefire and principles for resolving the Georgian-Abkhazian conflict was signed. Once again the Georgian military started to withdraw all of its heavy artillery, tanks, and many of its troops from Sukhumi. The Abkhaz separatists and their allies were bound by the agreement to hold their offensive and heavy bombardment of the city. In return, the Georgian side was reassured by Russia that Sukhumi would not be attacked or bombed if the Georgian army completed its withdrawal. The Georgian troops and tanks were evacuated by Russian military ships to the city of Poti. Sukhumi was left without any significant military defense. Many civilians stayed in Sukhumi, and all schools were re-opened on September 1. Many IDPs returned to their homes, and normal life resumed in the city. According to Shevardnadze, he trusted Yeltsin and the Russian guarantees and, therefore, asked the population to return.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Shevardnadze |first=Eduard |author-link=Eduard Shevardnadze |url=https://archive.org/details/futurebelongstof00edua |title=The Future Belongs to Freedom |publisher=Sinclair-Stevenson |year=1991 |isbn=978-1-85619-105-0 |location=London |translator-last=Fitzpatrick |translator-first=Catherine A. |url-access=registration |page=121}}</ref> However, the Abkhaz separatists, North Caucasian Volunteers, Cossacks, and Russian special forces attacked Sukhumi on September 16 at 8 a.m.{{sfn|Goltz|2006|p=93}}
{{quotation|...They captured a young girl. She was hiding in the bushes near the house where they killed her parents. She was raped several times. One of the soldiers killed her and mutilated her. She was cut in half. Near her body they left a message: as this corpse will never be as one piece, Abkhazia and Georgia will never be united either.<ref name=D.Kholodov>D.Kholodov. Dmitry Kholodov, Moscow journalist covering the Conflict, 1992</ref>}}


The attack marked the beginning of 12 days of non-stop fighting around the besieged Sukhumi, with intensive fighting and human loss from both sides. Georgians who stayed in the city with only rifles and ]s were left without any defense from artillery or mechanized units.{{sfn|Goltz|2006|p=153}} The union of theater actors of Sukhumi joined the fighting, along with other civilians. The city was mercilessly bombed by Russian air forces and separatist artillery.{{sfn|Goltz|2006|p=135}} On September 27, the city fell when Abkhaz, CMPC, and Russian units stormed the House of the Government of Abkhazia. One of the most horrific massacres of this war was waged on the civilian population of Sukhumi after its downfall. During the storming of the city, close to 1,000 people perished as Abkhaz formations overran the streets of the city. The civilians trapped in the city were taken from their houses, basements, and apartment buildings. In Tamaz Nadareishvili's book ''Genocide in Abkhazia'', the eyewitness interviews of the IDPs include the following account by the elderly Georgian refugee who survived the war:<ref name="T.Nadareishvili"/>
The separatists and their allies captured the Chairman of the Supreme Council ], the Mayor of Sukhumi ], ] and other members of the Abkhaz government including the members of Sukhumi police. Initially they were promised safety,<ref></ref> but eventually killed, and the UN report mentions Shartava being excessively tortured.<ref> Report of the UN Secretary General on the situation in Abkhazia, Georgia, October 12, 1993 </ref>


{{quotation|...&nbsp;They captured a young girl. She was hiding in the bushes near the house where they killed her parents. She was raped several times. One of the soldiers killed her and mutilated her. She was cut in half. Near her body they left a message: as this corpse will never be as one piece, Abkhazia and Georgia will never be united either.<ref name=T.Nadareishvili/>}}
The massacres continued after the fall of Sukhumi for about two weeks. Georgians who had failed to flee the city had been hiding in abandoned apartment buildings and house basements. Upon discovery by the militants, they were killed on the spot. One of the most brutal massacres of the war was committed during this period. Video materials show a 5 year old child being brutally killed by Abkhaz militant in front of his mother on the streets of Sukhumi. Abkhaz nationals were also targeted during the Sukhumi massacres. Anyone who had tried to hide a Georgian refugee or helped in any way was condemned and killed. ''"Temur Kutarba, an Abhazian, was killed by an Adighe Soldier in front of his children, for not being active in killing Georgians. V. Vadakaria, 23 and his Abhazian friend, who tried to defend him, both were killed."''<ref>Eye Witness account, UN observers report, 1994</ref>


The separatists and their allies captured the Chairman of the Supreme Council ], the Mayor of Sukhumi ], ] and other members of the Abkhaz government, including the members of Sukhumi police. Initially, they were promised safety,<ref></ref>{{better source needed|date=January 2021}} but eventually killed; Shartava was tortured before his death.<ref name=country/>
===Ochamchire===
A Georgian woman who survived the Sukhumi massacre recalls her ordeal in an interview with Russian film director ]:


{{quotation|When the Abkhaz entered my house, they took me and my seven year old son outside. After forcing us to kneel, they took my son and shot him right in front of me. After they grabbed me by hair and took me to the nearby well. An Abkhaz soldier forced me to look down that well; there I saw three younger men and couple of elderly women who were standing soaked in water naked. They were screaming and crying while the Abkhaz were dumping dead corpses on them. Afterwards, they threw a grenade there and placed more people inside. I was forced again to kneel in front of the dead corpses. One of the soldiers took his knife and took the eye out from one of the dead near me. Then he started to rub my lips and face with that decapitated eye. I could not take it any longer and fainted. They left me there in a pile of corpses.<ref name=country/>}}
Approximately 400 Georgian families were killed<ref>Chervonnaia, Svetlana Mikhailovna. Conflict in the Caucasus: Georgia, Abkhazia, and the Russian Shadow. Gothic Image Publications, 1994.</ref> during the Abkhaz offensive on ]. Similar to Gagra events of 1992, the local inhabitants were driven to the city soccer stadium Akhaldaba.<ref>Chervonnaia, Svetlana Mikhailovna. Conflict in the Caucasus: Georgia, Abkhazia, and the Russian Shadow. Gothic Image Publications, 1994.</ref> Men, woman and children were separated from each other. Within hours, the men were executed while woman and teenagers were raped and later killed.<ref>State Department, Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 1993, February 1994</ref>According to witness accounts, Abkhaz separatist organized detention camps where teenage girls and woman were kept for 25 days. During this period they were systematically raped and abused.<ref>The conflict in Abkhazia: dilemmas in Russian 'peacekeeping' policy, Lynch, Dov, p 34</ref> Besides the atrocities being committed on civilians, more than 50 Georgian prisoners of war were executed. The mass killing of civilians also occurred in other parts of Ochamchire district, mainly in Kochara (heavily populated by ethnic Georgians, pre-war estimates 5340 people lived in Kochara). Approximately 235 civilians were killed and 1000 houses were destroyed.<ref>The conflict in Abkhazia: dilemmas in Russian 'peacekeeping' policy, Lynch, Dov, pp 16-17 </ref>


According to the findings of a Georgian committee, the massacres continued for about two weeks after the fall of Sukhumi; Georgians who had failed to flee the city were hiding in abandoned apartment buildings and house basements; neither combatants nor civilians nor medical personnel (most of them female) was spared.<ref></ref> Upon discovery by the militants, they were killed on the spot. One of the most brutal massacres of the war occurred during this period. Video materials show a 5-year-old child being brutally killed by an Abkhaz militant in front of his mother on the streets of Sukhumi.
''"The Abkhazian separatist group captured sisters – Eka Jvania (17 years old) and Marina Jvania (14 years old), Leila Samushia and others in village Pshadi. They undressed them in front of their parents and neighbors, and raped them. After this the Abkhazians executed all of them by shooting."''<ref>Report by Human Rights Watch Helsinki, March 1995</ref>


Over 100 Georgian people working in the cultural field were killed, among them women. Among others were Nato Milorava, the artistic director of the Gumista recreation centre, Vasily Cheidze, Teymuraz Zhvaniya, and Guram Gelovani, actors of the Drama Theatre, and Yuriy Davitaya, the director of the Sukhumi park of culture and recreation.
==Gali==
{{Expand-section|date=June 2008}}
After the fall of Sukhumi, the only region in Abkhazia which maintained its large ethnic Georgian population was ]. The ethnic composition of Gali region differed from the rest of Abkhazia. The region was mainly populated by ethnic Georgians and never experienced any military activity during the war.<ref>Chervonnaia, Svetlana Mikhailovna. Conflict in the Caucasus: Georgia, Abkhazia, and the Russian Shadow. Gothic Image Publications, 1994. </ref> In the beginning of 1994, Abkhaz separatists confronted by the reality of the large ethnic Georgian presence within the borders of Abkhazia continued its policy of ethnic cleansing and forced expulsion of ethnic Georgians.<ref>Briefing on Current Situation in Georgia and Implications for U.S. Policy, Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe, October 25, 1993 </ref> United Nations observers witnessed the events of 94 as they unfolded.<ref>Report of the UN Secretary General on the situation in Abkhazia, Georgia, October 12, 1994 </ref> Between February 8 and 13 Abkhaz separatist militia and their allies attacked the villages and populated areas of Gali region, killing, raping and destroying houses (approximately 4,200 houses were destroyed as the result).<ref>S State Department, Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 1993, February 1994</ref> Despite the presence of Russian CIS peacekeeping forces, the massacres and mass killing of ethnic Georgians was carried out between 1995-1996 which resulted in 450 death and thousands of IDPs fleeing eastwards.<ref>S State Department, Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 1993, February 1994</ref> In 1997, more than 1,300 civilians perished, thousands of houses burned and hundreds of cultural centers and churches looted. By 1998, almost all of ethnic Georgian population (approximately 50,000 people) in Gali region was forcefully driven out.<ref>Chervonnaia, Svetlana Mikhailovna. ''Conflict in the Caucasus: Georgia, Abkhazia, and the Russian Shadow.'' Gothic Image Publications, 1994.</ref>


Also murdered were 200 teachers, including 60 women. Massive reprisals occurred in the neighbouring regions as well. In Khypsta/Akhalsopeli 17 Georgians were shot, the heart of a 70-year-old man was cut out, another man was hacked to death by an axe, and a 65-year-old was tied to a tractor, tortured, and then killed.
==Post-war period==
{{Expand-section|date=June 2008}}
{{cquote|''For all those volunteers who have contributed in our victory, we shall reward them with residency and citizenship.''<ref>Quote by ] (Separatist leader), "Izvestiya" October, 1992</ref>}}


Abkhaz nationals were also targeted during the Sukhumi massacres. Anyone who had tried to hide a Georgian refugee or helped in any way was condemned and killed. "Temur Kutarba, an Abhazian, was killed by an Adighe Soldier in front of his children, for not being active in killing Georgians. V. Vadakaria, 23 and his Abhazian friend, who tried to defend him, both were killed."{{cq|date=January 2021}}
The Human Rights Watch report which was drafted in 1995 and included detailed account of the war crimes and atrocities committed during the war concludes that, "Human Rights Watch finds Abkhaz forces responsible for the foreseeable wave of revenge, human rights abuse, and war crimes that was unleashed on the Georgian population in Sukhumi and other parts of Abkhazia. In Human Rights Watch's judgment, these practices were indeed encouraged in order to drive the Georgian population from its homes."<ref name="hrwreport"/>


===Ochamchire===
"''And out of group of 12 front line soldiers, 2 were Abkhazian, 2 were Armenian, 1 Armenian locally from Sukhumi, 1 from Yerevan who was too young to go fight the good fight in Karabakh, and the rest were either from the North Caucasus or from places like in Siberia. What were they motivated by? Looting. They had been promised houses with tangerine gardens. They had been promised cars''."<ref>Briefing on Current Situation in Georgia and Implications for U.S. Policy, Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe Monday, October 25, 1993', p.7</ref>
Approximately 400 Georgian families were killed during the Abkhaz offensive on ]. Similar to the Gagra events of 1992, the local inhabitants were driven to the city soccer stadium Akhaldaba.{{sfn|Chervonnaya|1994|p= {{pn|date=December 2024}} }} Men, women, and children were separated from each other. Within hours, the men were executed while women and teenagers were raped and later killed.<ref name=country /> According to witness accounts, Abkhaz separatists organized detention camps where teenage girls and women were kept for 25 days. During this period they were systematically raped and abused.{{sfn|Lynch|1998|p=34}} Along with the atrocities being committed against civilians, more than 50 Georgian prisoners of war were executed. The mass killing of civilians also occurred in other parts of the Ochamchire district, mainly in Kochara (heavily populated by ethnic Georgians – 5340 persons according to pre-war estimates). Approximately 235 civilians were killed and 1000 houses were destroyed.{{sfn|Lynch|1998|pp=16-17}}


===Gali===
The legacy of ethnic cleansing in Abkhazia had been devastating for the Georgian society. The war and the subsequent systematic ethnic cleansing produced about 270,000-300,000 of ] that fled to various Georgian regions, mostly in ] (Mingrelia) (112,208; ], June ]). In Tbilisi and elsewhere in Georgia refugees occupy hundreds of hotels, dormitories and abandoned Soviet military barracks for temporary residency. Many of them have to leave for other countries, primarily to Russia, to search for work.
After the fall of Sukhumi, the only region in Abkhazia which maintained its large ethnic Georgian population was ]. The ethnic composition of Gali differed from that of the rest of Abkhazia. The region was mainly populated by ethnic Georgians and had never experienced military activity during the war.{{sfn|Chervonnaya|1994|p= {{pn|date=December 2024}} }} At the beginning of 1994, Abkhaz separatists, confronted by the reality of the large ethnic Georgian presence within the borders of Abkhazia, continued their policy of ethnic cleansing and forced expulsion of ethnic Georgians.<ref>Briefing on Current Situation in Georgia and Implications for U.S. Policy, Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe, October 25, 1993</ref> United Nations observers witnessed the events of 1994 as they unfolded.<ref>Report of the UN Secretary General on the situation in Abkhazia, Georgia, October 12, 1994</ref> Between February 8 and 13, the Abkhaz separatist militia and their allies attacked the villages and populated areas of the Gali region, killing, raping, and destroying houses. Approximately 4,200 houses were destroyed as a result.<ref name=SDHR1994></ref> Despite the presence of Russian CIS peacekeeping forces, the massacres of ethnic Georgians were carried out between 1995 and 1996, which resulted in 450 deaths and thousands of IDPs fleeing eastwards.<ref>U.S. Department of State Country Report on Human Rights Practices 1995, 1996</ref>


==Post-war period==
Some 40,000 IDPs sporadically returned in the Gali district after the 1994 ceasefire accord. However, almost half of those returned were again forced to flee and over 1,500 Georgian houses burned to the ground in May ], when bloody clashes erupted between the Abkhaz forces and Georgian guerillas. The situation in the Gali district remains precarious. The government of Georgia regularly protests against the persecution of remaining Georgian population in the area. Despite numerous reports about hostage taking, robbery, forced labor and forced conscription in the Abkhaz forces, the Sukhumi-based de facto authorities resolutely oppose the Georgian and UN urges to allow the opening a UN Human Rights office in the separatist-controlled town of Gali.
]
The legacy of ethnic cleansing in Abkhazia has been devastating for Georgian society. The war and the subsequent systematic ethnic cleansing produced about 200,000-250,000<ref name="abkhaziatoday"/> ], who fled to various Georgian regions, mostly in ] (Mingrelia) (112,208; ], June 2000). In Tbilisi and elsewhere in Georgia refugees occupied hundreds of hotels, dormitories and abandoned Soviet military barracks for temporary residency.{{When|date=December 2009}} Many of them had to leave for other countries, primarily to Russia, to search for work.<ref>{{cite book |title= Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization: Yearbook 1997|last1= Mullen|first1= J. Atticus Ryan|last2=Mullen|first2=Christopher A.|year= 1998|location=Leiden|publisher= Martinus Nijhoff Publishers|isbn= 978-90-411-1022-0|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=yiesQNB3SAMC&pg=PA175|page= 173}}</ref>


In the early 1990s, refugees living in Georgia resisted assimilation into Georgian society. Georgia's government did not encourage the assimilation of the refugees, fearing that it would "lose one of the arguments for retaining hegemony over Abkhazia".<ref>{{cite book |title= When Things Fall Apart: Qualitative Studies of Poverty in the Former Soviet Union|last1= Dudwick|first1= Nora|last2=Gomart |first2=Elizabeth |last3= Marc |first3=Alexandre|year= 2003|location=Washington D.C.|publisher=World Bank Publications|isbn=978-0-8213-5067-6|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dF4p6OBxv0wC&q=Abkhazia&pg=PA245|page= 245}}</ref>
At the week of ] of the ], the ] ] said at the ]: {{cquote|''] realizes that no ] or group of states can replace our ] efforts in this specific ].''<ref>, '']'', October 11, 1993</ref>}}
]
Some 60,000 Georgian refugees spontaneously returned to Abkhazia's ] between 1994 and 1998, but tens of thousands were displaced again when fighting resumed in the Gali district in 1998. Nevertheless, between 40,000 and 60,000 refugees have returned to the Gali district since 1998, including persons commuting daily across the ceasefire line, as well as those migrating seasonally in accordance with agricultural cycles.<ref>, {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070628110410/http://www.unhcr.org/publ/RSDLEGAL/43a6878d4.pdf |date=June 28, 2007 }}</ref> The human rights situation remains precarious in Georgian-populated areas of the Gali district. The United Nations and other international organizations have been fruitlessly urging the ''de facto'' Abkhaz authorities "to refrain from adopting measures incompatible with the right to return and with international human rights standards, such as discriminatory legislation&nbsp;... to cooperate in the establishment of a permanent international human rights office in Gali and to admit United Nations civilian police without further delay."<ref> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061223084834/http://www.brook.edu/fp/projects/idp/200603_rpt_Georgia.pdf |date=December 23, 2006 }}. United Nations: 2006.</ref>

==Response==
According to political scientist Bruno Coppieters, "Western governments took some diplomatic initiatives in the United Nations and made up an appeal to Moscow to halt an active involvement of its military forces in the conflict. UN Security Council passed series of resolutions in which it appeals for a cease-fire and condemned the Abkhazian policy of ethnic-cleansing."<ref name=cop/>


==See also== ==See also==
{{Portal|Abkhazia|Georgia (country)}}
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{{Clear}}
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==Notes== ==References==
{{reflist|2}} {{reflist|30em}}


==Bibliography== ===Works cited===
* {{Cite web |last1=Anderson |first1=Kenneth |last2=Hammond |first2=Louis |date=March 1995 |editor-last=Hiltermann |editor-first=Joost R. |title=Georgia / Abkhazia: Violations of the Laws of War and Russia's Role of the Conflict |url=https://www.hrw.org/reports/pdfs/g/georgia/georgia953.pdf |access-date=2024-12-20 |website=Human Rights Watch Arms Project}}
* Mirsky, Georgiy. ''On Ruins of Empire: Ethnicity and Nationalism in the Former Soviet Union.'' MacArthur Foundation and the London School of Economics and Political Science.
* Chervonnaia, Svetlana Mikhailovna. ''Conflict in the Caucasus: Georgia, Abkhazia, and the Russian Shadow.'' Gothic Image Publications, 1994. * {{Cite book |last=Chervonnaya |first=Svetlana |author-link=Svetlana Chervonnaya |title=Conflict in the Caucasus: Georgia, Abkhazia, and the Russian Shadow |publisher=Gothic Image Publications |year=1994 |isbn=978-0-906362-30-3 |location=Glastonbury |translator-last=Chanturia |translator-first=Ariane}}
* {{Cite book |last=Goltz |first=Thomas |author-link=Thomas Goltz |title=Georgia Diary: A Chronicle of War and Political Chaos in the Post-Soviet |publisher=M.E. Sharpe |year=2006 |isbn=978-0-7656-1710-1 |location=Armonk}}
* Human Rights Watch. Published on hrw.org, March 1995.
* Lynch, Dov. ''The Conflict in Abkhazia: Dilemmas in Russian 'Peacekeeping' Policy.'' Royal Institute of International Affairs, February 1998. * {{Cite book |last=Lynch |first=Dov |title=The Conflict in Abkhazia: Dilemmas in Russian 'Peacekeeping' Policy |publisher=Chatham House |year=1998 |isbn=978-1-86203-027-5 |location=London}}
*Marshania L. ''Tragedy of Abkhazia'' Moscow, 1996 * Marshania L. ''Tragedy of Abkhazia'' Moscow, 1996
*''White Book of Abkhazia.'' 1992-1993 Documents, Materials, Evidences. Moscow, 1993. * ''White Book of Abkhazia.'' 1992–1993 Documents, Materials, Evidences. Moscow, 1993.
*], Moscow journalist covering the Conflict, 1992
* Andersen, Andrew. Published October 2001.


== External links == ==External links==
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* {{ru icon}} * {{in lang|ru}}
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{{Georgian-Abkhazian conflict}} {{Georgian-Abkhazian conflict}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Ethnic Cleansing Of Georgians In Abkhazia}}
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Latest revision as of 04:23, 3 January 2025

1992–1998 removal and flight of Georgians from Abkhazia
Ethnic cleansing of Georgians in Abkhazia
A visitor at a gallery recognizes her dead son in a photograph on the 12th anniversary of the ethnic cleansing in Abkhazia, 2005.
LocationAbkhazia, Georgia
Date1992–1998
TargetGeorgian population, Oppositions to the new Government of Abkhazia
Attack typeEthnic cleansing, Massacres, Deportations, others
Deaths5,000–5,738 killed
Victims200,000 – 267,345 displaced, 400 missing
PerpetratorsAbkhaz separatists
MotiveAnti-Georgian sentiment

The ethnic cleansing of Georgians in Abkhazia, also known in Georgia as the genocide of Georgians in Abkhazia (Georgian: ქართველთა გენოციდი აფხაზეთში, romanized: kartvelta genotsidi apkhazetshi), refers to the ethnic cleansing, massacres, and forced mass expulsion of thousands of ethnic Georgians living in Abkhazia during both the 1992–1993 and 1998 Wars of Abkhazia by Abkhaz separatists and their allies. Armenians, Greeks, Russians, and opposing Abkhazians were also killed.

In 2007, 267,345 Georgian civilians were registered as internally displaced persons (IDPs). The ethnic cleansing and massacres of Georgians have been officially recognized by Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) conventions in 1994, 1996, and 1999 during the Budapest, Lisbon, and Istanbul summits, which condemned the "perpetrators of war crimes committed during the conflict."

On 15 May 2008, the United Nations General Assembly adopted (by 14 votes to 11, with 105 abstentions) resolution A/RES/62/249, which "mphasizes the importance of preserving the property rights of refugees and internally displaced persons from Abkhazia, Georgia, including victims of reported "ethnic cleansing," and calls upon all the Member States to deter persons under their jurisdiction from obtaining property within the territory of Abkhazia, Georgia in violation of the rights of returnees." The UN Security Council passed a series of resolutions in which it appealed for a cease-fire.

Background

See also: Demographics of Abkhazia

Prior to the 1992 War, Georgians made up nearly half of Abkhazia's population, while less than one-fifth of the population was Abkhaz. In contrast, in 1926, the two populations had been nearly balanced at around one-third each, with Russians, Armenians, and Greeks constituting the remainder. Large-scale immigration of Georgians, Russians, and Armenians allowed their respective populations to balloon; while the Abkhaz population had not even doubled by 1989, the Georgian population had nearly quadrupled from 67,494 to 239,872, the Armenian population had tripled, and the Russian population had sextupled.

Abkhazia conflict

See also: Abkhazia conflict

The ethnic conflict in Abkhazia largely began in July 1989 with the Sukhumi riots. In order to defuse tensions, Georgian President Zviad Gamsakhurdia agreed on an arrangement to grant a wide over-representation to Abkhazians in the local Supreme Council, with Abkhazians, while being only 18% of the population, getting the largest portion of seats. A two-thirds majority was to be required to pass "important legislation" to ensure that key decisions would not be taken without approval from both Abkhaz and Georgian deputies and each side would hold veto power in principle. The elections to the Abkhazian Supreme Soviet were held in September and October 1991. However, the power-sharing agreement soon proved to be unsustainable and broke down.

Ethnic Abkhaz Vladislav Ardzinba was elected Chairman of the Supreme Soviet of Abkhazia. Ardzinba, who was a charismatic but excitable figure popular among the Abkhaz, was believed by Georgians to have helped to instigate the violence of July 1989. Ardzinba managed to consolidate his power relatively quickly and reneged on pre-election promises to increase the representation of Georgians in Abkhazia's autonomous structures; since then, Ardzinba tried to rule Abkhazia relatively single-handedly, but avoided, for the time being, overt conflict with the central authorities in Tbilisi. However, Ardzinba created the Abkhazian National Guard that was mono-ethnically Abkhaz, and initiated a practice of replacing ethnic Georgians in leading positions with Abkhaz. On 24 June 1992, the Abkhaz armed formations attacked the building of Abkhazian Ministry of Internal Affairs, beat up and forcibly removed ethnic Georgian minister Givi Lominadze from office, replacing him with ethnic Abkhaz Alexander Ankvab, without the consent of Georgian deputies. After this, on 30 June, Georgian deputies of the Supreme Soviet organized a walk-out and began boycotting the Soviet.

The political situation in Abkhazia changed into a military confrontation between the Georgian government and Abkhaz separatists. The fighting escalated as Georgian Interior and Defence Ministry forces, along with police units, took Sukhumi and came near the city of Gudauta. The ethnically based policies initiated by the Georgians in Sukhumi simultaneously created refugees and a core of fighters determined to regain lost homes. However, as the war progressed, the Abkhaz separatists carried out similar policies of violent displacement of ethnic Georgians in greater proportions, which saw 250,000 people forcefully evicted from their homes. Using aid allegedly provided by Russia, the separatists managed to re-arm and organize militants from North Caucasus. According to political analyst Georgy Mirsky, the Russian military base in Gudauta was, "supplying the Abkhazian side with weapons and ammunition." Furthermore, he adds that "no direct proof of this has ever been offered, but it would be more naïve to believe that the tanks, rockets, howitzers, pieces of ordnance, and other heavy weapons that the anti-Georgian coalition forces were increasing using in their war had been captured from the enemy."

Perpetrators

The anti-Georgian military coalition was made up of the Confederation of Mountain Peoples of the Caucasus, Shamil Basaev's "Grey Wolf" Chechen division, the Armenian Bagramyan Battalion, Cossacks, militants from Transnistria, and various Russian special units.

Musa Shanibov, one of the leaders of the Confederation of Mountain Peoples of the Caucasus, said during his speech to the militants from said organization in 1992:

Our enemy must see how we're uniting and gaining strength. We need to thoroughly consider our operations and evaluate small, yet important facts. We need to act professionally. We need to quickly learn how to kill, hack, cut off noses, etc.

Ethnic cleansing (1992–1993)

Confronted with hundreds of thousands of ethnic Georgians unwilling to leave their homes, the Abkhaz side implemented a process of ethnic cleansing to expel and eliminate the ethnic Georgian population in Abkhazia.

The exact number of those killed during the ethnic cleansing is disputed. According to Georgian data, 5,000 civilians were killed and 400 were missing. Roughly 200,000 to 250,000 ethnic Georgians were expelled from their homes. The campaign of ethnic cleansing also affected Russians, Armenians, Greeks, some Abkhaz, and other minor ethnic groups living in Abkhazia. More than 20,000 houses owned by ethnic Georgians were destroyed. Hundreds of schools, kindergartens, churches, hospitals, and historical monuments were pillaged and destroyed.

The 1994 U.S. State Department Country Report describes scenes of massive human rights abuse, which is supported by the findings of Human Rights Watch. According to U.S. State Department Country Report on Conflict in Abkhazia (Georgia):

{{quotation|The separatist forces committed widespread atrocities against the Georgian civilian population, killing many women, children, and elderly, capturing some as hostages and torturing others ... they also killed large numbers of Georgian civilians who remained behind in Abkhaz-seized territory ...

The separatists launched a reign of terror against the majority Georgian population, although other nationalities also suffered. Chechens and other north Caucasians from the Russian Federation reportedly joined local Abkhaz troops in the commission of atrocities ... Those fleeing Abkhazia made highly credible claims of atrocities, including the killing of civilians without regard for age or sex. Corpses recovered from Abkhaz-held territory showed signs of extensive torture

After the end of the war, the government of Georgia, the United Nations, the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), and the refugees began to investigate and gather facts about the allegations of genocide, ethnic cleansing, and deportation conducted by the Abkhaz side during the conflict. In 1994 and again in 1996, OSCE officially recognized the ethnic cleansing of Georgians in Abkhazia and condemned the "perpetrators of war crimes committed during the conflict."

According to Catherine Dale from United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees:

In a former tourist camp in Kutaisi, a large gathering of displaced people tell of the "common practice" called the "Italian necktie", in which the tongue is cut out of the throat and tied around the neck. A woman tells of a man being forced to rape his teenage daughter, and of Abkhaz soldiers having sex with dead bodies. A man tells how in Gudauta, Abkhaz killed small children and then cut off their heads to play football with them. These themes are repeated in many separate accounts.

The Human Rights Watch report drafted in 1995 included a detailed account of the war crimes and atrocities committed during the war. It concludes that "Human Rights Watch finds Abkhaz forces responsible for the foreseeable wave of revenge, human rights abuse, and war crimes that were unleashed on the Georgian population in Sukhumi and other parts of Abkhazia. In Human Rights Watch's judgment, these practices were indeed encouraged in order to drive the Georgian population from its homes."

The Georgian command wanted to make a Blitzkrieg in Abkhazia  But not everything is decided by tanks and Grads. The Abkhazians don't have any other land, and we have no way to go. But also the Georgians can live here no longer. In Abkhazia, they can only die. (Vitaliy Smyr, 1992)

Below are a few examples taken from the Helsinki Human Rights Watch Reports, as well as documentation submitted for review to the United Nations and the Hague War Crimes Tribunal.

Fall of Gagra

Main article: Battle of Gagra

On 3 September 1992, the Russian-mediated agreement was signed between Georgian and Abkhaz separatist sides, which obliged Georgia to withdraw its military forces from the city of Gagra. The agreement forced Abkhaz separatists from Gudauta to hold their attacks on the city. Soon after, the Georgian forces, which included Shavnabada, Avaza, and White Eagle battalions (along with their tanks and heavy artillery), left the city. Only small pockets of armed groups (made up of volunteer units of the ethnic Georgians of Gagra) remained. However, on October 1, the Abkhaz side violated the agreement and launched a full-scale attack on Gagra. The attack was well coordinated and mainly carried out by the Chechen (under the command of Shamil Basaev) and North Caucasian militants. Meantime in Gagra, small Georgian detachments lost control of the city suburbs (Leselidze and Kolkhida) and were destroyed in the city center by the end of October 1. With the fall of Gagra, the Georgian population was captured by the separatists and their allies. The first significant massacres and ethnic cleansings were committed during the fall of Gagra.

People of all ages were rounded up from Gagra, Leselidze, and Kolkhida and killed. When the separatist militants entered the city, civilians became a target of mass murder. The main targets were young people and children. According to the witness account:

"When I returned home I was surprised to see a lot of armed people on the street. They were quiet. I mistook one of them for my Georgian neighbour, and I said, "How are you?" in Georgian. He grabbed me by the wrist and said, "Keep quiet." I wasn't afraid for myself; I thought they had killed my family. He asked me in Russian, "Where are your young people? We won't kill you, we'll kill them." I said they weren't here, that there were only old people left."

Women and young girls captured by the militants became the victims of rape and torture. One elderly Georgian woman who lived through the October attack in Gagra recounted the following: "They brought over a blind man and his brother, who always stayed with him. They began to beat the blind man, his brother and his wife with a gun butt, calling him "dog!" and kicking him. He fell over. I saw blood. One soldier said: "We won't kill you, but where are the young girls?" I said there weren't any."

"My husband Sergo was dragged and tied to a tree. An Abkhaz woman named Zoya Tsvizba brought a tray with lots of salt on it. She took the knife and started to inflict wounds on my husband. After that, she threw salt onto my husband's exposed wounds. They tortured him like that for ten minutes. Afterwards, they forced a young Georgian boy (they killed him afterwards) to dig a hole with the tractor. They placed my husband in this hole and buried him alive. The only thing I remember him saying before he was covered with the gravel and sand was: 'Dali, take care of the kids!'"

After the fall of Gagra, the victors began to pillage, rape, and torture, followed by summary executions of everyone who was captured and failed to flee the city in time. At 5:00 pm on October 1, approximately 1000–1500 civilians were rounded up and placed under guard at the soccer stadium in downtown Gagra. On October 6, close to 50 civilians were found hanging on electricity poles. Soon after, children, elderly, women, and men who were detained at the soccer stadium were gunned down and dumped in mass graves not far from the stadium.

A Russian military observer Mikhail Demianov (who was accused by the Georgian side of being the military advisor to the separatist leader Ardzinba) told Human Rights Watch:

When they entered Gagra, I saw Shamyl Basaev's battalion. I have never seen such a horror. They were raping and killing everyone who was captured and dragged from their homes. The Abkhaz commander Arshba raped a 14-year-old girl and later gave an order to execute her. For the whole day I only could hear the screams and cries of the people who were brutally tortured. On the next day, I witnessed the mass execution of people on the stadium. They installed machine guns and mortars on the top and placed people right on the field. It took a couple of hours to kill everybody.

UN observers started to investigate and gather all the facts concerning the war crimes during the fall of Gagra. The Deputy Chairman of the Supreme Council of Abkhazia, Mikhail Jinjaradze, was dragged out of his office and executed.

Massacre in Kamani

Main article: Kamani massacre

After the failed attempt of the separatist forces and their allies to storm Sukhumi on March 14, 1993, they diverted their main forces to the northern side of the front line, which divided Georgian-held Sukhumi and separatist-controlled territories. On July 4, the Confederation of Mountain Peoples of the Caucasus (CMPC) militia, Abkhaz formations, and the Armenian Bagramyan battalion, allegedly transported by Russian naval forces to Tkvarcheli, began their offensive on the northern Sukhumi district. Georgian forces and local volunteer units (including Ukrainian nationalist organization members (Ukrainian National Assembly – Ukrainian People's Self-Defence)) stationed in the villages of Shroma, Tamishi, and Kamani were taken by surprise. On July 5, after intensive fighting, the Georgians lost as many as 500 people in a couple of hours. The village of Kamani fell into the hands of separatist formations and their North Caucasian allies. Kamani was populated mainly by Svans (a sub-ethnic group of the Georgian people) and Orthodox nuns who had been living in the church of St George in the center of the village. The local villagers (including women and children) were massacred, while the church of St George became the scene of a blood bath. The nuns were raped and killed before the Orthodox priests, father Yuri Anua and father Andria. Both priests were taken outside of the church and questioned about the land ownership in Abkhazia. After answering that Abkhazia was neither Georgian nor Abkhaz land but God's, they were shot by a confederate soldier. Another priest, an ethnic Abkhaz who was forced to shoot father Andria, was killed. Approximately 120 inhabitants of the village were massacred.

Fall of Sukhumi

Thomas Goltz, a war correspondent who visited Abkhazia during the war, recalls that Russian MIG-29s dropped 500 kilograms of vacuum bombs which mainly targeted the residential areas of Sukhumi and villages on Gumista River. The Russian journalist Dmitry Kholodov remained in Sukhumi before it fell to separatists and wrote a couple of reports from the besieged city,

The shelling of Sokhumi is the most disgusting thing in this war ... All the residents of Sokhumi remember the first shelling. It took place on 2 December 1992. The first rocket fell on Peace Street. They struck at crowded places. The next strategic 'target' was the town market which was hit with great precision. Eighteen people were killed that day. There were always lots of people in the market.

On July 27, 1993, a Russian-brokered trilateral agreement on a ceasefire and principles for resolving the Georgian-Abkhazian conflict was signed. Once again the Georgian military started to withdraw all of its heavy artillery, tanks, and many of its troops from Sukhumi. The Abkhaz separatists and their allies were bound by the agreement to hold their offensive and heavy bombardment of the city. In return, the Georgian side was reassured by Russia that Sukhumi would not be attacked or bombed if the Georgian army completed its withdrawal. The Georgian troops and tanks were evacuated by Russian military ships to the city of Poti. Sukhumi was left without any significant military defense. Many civilians stayed in Sukhumi, and all schools were re-opened on September 1. Many IDPs returned to their homes, and normal life resumed in the city. According to Shevardnadze, he trusted Yeltsin and the Russian guarantees and, therefore, asked the population to return. However, the Abkhaz separatists, North Caucasian Volunteers, Cossacks, and Russian special forces attacked Sukhumi on September 16 at 8 a.m.

The attack marked the beginning of 12 days of non-stop fighting around the besieged Sukhumi, with intensive fighting and human loss from both sides. Georgians who stayed in the city with only rifles and AK-47s were left without any defense from artillery or mechanized units. The union of theater actors of Sukhumi joined the fighting, along with other civilians. The city was mercilessly bombed by Russian air forces and separatist artillery. On September 27, the city fell when Abkhaz, CMPC, and Russian units stormed the House of the Government of Abkhazia. One of the most horrific massacres of this war was waged on the civilian population of Sukhumi after its downfall. During the storming of the city, close to 1,000 people perished as Abkhaz formations overran the streets of the city. The civilians trapped in the city were taken from their houses, basements, and apartment buildings. In Tamaz Nadareishvili's book Genocide in Abkhazia, the eyewitness interviews of the IDPs include the following account by the elderly Georgian refugee who survived the war:

... They captured a young girl. She was hiding in the bushes near the house where they killed her parents. She was raped several times. One of the soldiers killed her and mutilated her. She was cut in half. Near her body they left a message: as this corpse will never be as one piece, Abkhazia and Georgia will never be united either.

The separatists and their allies captured the Chairman of the Supreme Council Zhiuli Shartava, the Mayor of Sukhumi Guram Gabiskiria, Mamia Alasania and other members of the Abkhaz government, including the members of Sukhumi police. Initially, they were promised safety, but eventually killed; Shartava was tortured before his death. A Georgian woman who survived the Sukhumi massacre recalls her ordeal in an interview with Russian film director Andrei Nekrasov:

When the Abkhaz entered my house, they took me and my seven year old son outside. After forcing us to kneel, they took my son and shot him right in front of me. After they grabbed me by hair and took me to the nearby well. An Abkhaz soldier forced me to look down that well; there I saw three younger men and couple of elderly women who were standing soaked in water naked. They were screaming and crying while the Abkhaz were dumping dead corpses on them. Afterwards, they threw a grenade there and placed more people inside. I was forced again to kneel in front of the dead corpses. One of the soldiers took his knife and took the eye out from one of the dead near me. Then he started to rub my lips and face with that decapitated eye. I could not take it any longer and fainted. They left me there in a pile of corpses.

According to the findings of a Georgian committee, the massacres continued for about two weeks after the fall of Sukhumi; Georgians who had failed to flee the city were hiding in abandoned apartment buildings and house basements; neither combatants nor civilians nor medical personnel (most of them female) was spared. Upon discovery by the militants, they were killed on the spot. One of the most brutal massacres of the war occurred during this period. Video materials show a 5-year-old child being brutally killed by an Abkhaz militant in front of his mother on the streets of Sukhumi.

Over 100 Georgian people working in the cultural field were killed, among them women. Among others were Nato Milorava, the artistic director of the Gumista recreation centre, Vasily Cheidze, Teymuraz Zhvaniya, and Guram Gelovani, actors of the Drama Theatre, and Yuriy Davitaya, the director of the Sukhumi park of culture and recreation.

Also murdered were 200 teachers, including 60 women. Massive reprisals occurred in the neighbouring regions as well. In Khypsta/Akhalsopeli 17 Georgians were shot, the heart of a 70-year-old man was cut out, another man was hacked to death by an axe, and a 65-year-old was tied to a tractor, tortured, and then killed.

Abkhaz nationals were also targeted during the Sukhumi massacres. Anyone who had tried to hide a Georgian refugee or helped in any way was condemned and killed. "Temur Kutarba, an Abhazian, was killed by an Adighe Soldier in front of his children, for not being active in killing Georgians. V. Vadakaria, 23 and his Abhazian friend, who tried to defend him, both were killed."

Ochamchire

Approximately 400 Georgian families were killed during the Abkhaz offensive on Ochamchire. Similar to the Gagra events of 1992, the local inhabitants were driven to the city soccer stadium Akhaldaba. Men, women, and children were separated from each other. Within hours, the men were executed while women and teenagers were raped and later killed. According to witness accounts, Abkhaz separatists organized detention camps where teenage girls and women were kept for 25 days. During this period they were systematically raped and abused. Along with the atrocities being committed against civilians, more than 50 Georgian prisoners of war were executed. The mass killing of civilians also occurred in other parts of the Ochamchire district, mainly in Kochara (heavily populated by ethnic Georgians – 5340 persons according to pre-war estimates). Approximately 235 civilians were killed and 1000 houses were destroyed.

Gali

After the fall of Sukhumi, the only region in Abkhazia which maintained its large ethnic Georgian population was Gali. The ethnic composition of Gali differed from that of the rest of Abkhazia. The region was mainly populated by ethnic Georgians and had never experienced military activity during the war. At the beginning of 1994, Abkhaz separatists, confronted by the reality of the large ethnic Georgian presence within the borders of Abkhazia, continued their policy of ethnic cleansing and forced expulsion of ethnic Georgians. United Nations observers witnessed the events of 1994 as they unfolded. Between February 8 and 13, the Abkhaz separatist militia and their allies attacked the villages and populated areas of the Gali region, killing, raping, and destroying houses. Approximately 4,200 houses were destroyed as a result. Despite the presence of Russian CIS peacekeeping forces, the massacres of ethnic Georgians were carried out between 1995 and 1996, which resulted in 450 deaths and thousands of IDPs fleeing eastwards.

Post-war period

Sizes of Abkhazia's major ethnic groups in 1989 and in 2003

The legacy of ethnic cleansing in Abkhazia has been devastating for Georgian society. The war and the subsequent systematic ethnic cleansing produced about 200,000-250,000 IDPs, who fled to various Georgian regions, mostly in Samegrelo (Mingrelia) (112,208; UNHCR, June 2000). In Tbilisi and elsewhere in Georgia refugees occupied hundreds of hotels, dormitories and abandoned Soviet military barracks for temporary residency. Many of them had to leave for other countries, primarily to Russia, to search for work.

In the early 1990s, refugees living in Georgia resisted assimilation into Georgian society. Georgia's government did not encourage the assimilation of the refugees, fearing that it would "lose one of the arguments for retaining hegemony over Abkhazia".

Some 60,000 Georgian refugees spontaneously returned to Abkhazia's Gali district between 1994 and 1998, but tens of thousands were displaced again when fighting resumed in the Gali district in 1998. Nevertheless, between 40,000 and 60,000 refugees have returned to the Gali district since 1998, including persons commuting daily across the ceasefire line, as well as those migrating seasonally in accordance with agricultural cycles. The human rights situation remains precarious in Georgian-populated areas of the Gali district. The United Nations and other international organizations have been fruitlessly urging the de facto Abkhaz authorities "to refrain from adopting measures incompatible with the right to return and with international human rights standards, such as discriminatory legislation ... to cooperate in the establishment of a permanent international human rights office in Gali and to admit United Nations civilian police without further delay."

Response

According to political scientist Bruno Coppieters, "Western governments took some diplomatic initiatives in the United Nations and made up an appeal to Moscow to halt an active involvement of its military forces in the conflict. UN Security Council passed series of resolutions in which it appeals for a cease-fire and condemned the Abkhazian policy of ethnic-cleansing."

See also

References

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  2. Anderson & Hammond 1995, p. 6.
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  14. A/RES/62/249, A/62/PV.97
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Works cited

External links

Abkhaz–Georgian conflict
Key events
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Key leaders
Georgian side
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See also
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