United Javakhk Democratic Alliance

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United Javakhk Democratic Alliance
Leader Vahagn Chakhalyan
Founded November 1991
Headquarters Akhalkalaki, Georgia
Ideology Regionalism
Armenian nationalism

The United Javakhk Democratic Alliance (Armenian: «Միացյալ Ջավախք» ժողովրդավարական դաշինք Miatsyal Javakhk zhoghovrdavarakan dashink' ) is a non-government organization composed of ethnic Armenians living in Samtskhe-Javakheti region of Georgia. It has, at various times, called for local autonomy for predominantly ethnic Armenian area of Javakheti known in Armenian as Javakhk; whence the organization's name. Its current leader is Vahagn Chakhalyan.

The movement has pursued contradictory policy, alternating sometime confrontational stance with the central Georgian government with more conciliatory rhetoric. It has its origin in the Javakhk movement which emerged in 1988 and was instrumental in organizing the deployment of a small unit of Javakheti Armenians to the conflict with Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh. Javakhk has lobbied for the creation of an Armenian autonomous region within Georgia, and organized protests against the centrally proposed local administrators and Georgian military exercises early in the 1990s. During the civil strife in Tbilisi early in 1991, the Javakhk exploited the constitutional vacuum and organized the Provisional Council of Representatives which self-dissolved after the local officials proposed by Tbilisi were finally accepted in November 1991. The organization proposed to hold a referendum on autonomy or secession of Javakheti, but the Armenian government, mindful of the importance of its relations with Georgia, has been careful to defuse potential problems in the region, intervening once to talk Javakhk out of plans to hold a referendum on autonomy or secession. Both the Georgian and Armenian governments have pursued a careful and calming policy in regard with local nationalist movements that helped ease tensions in the region.[1]

See also

References

  1. Cornell, Svante E., Autonomy and Conflict: Ethnoterritoriality and Separatism in the South Caucasus – Case in Georgia, pp. 107, 164. Department of Peace and Conflict Research, Report No. 61. Uppsala. ISBN 91-506-1600-5.

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