'Upper Abkhazia' (, ''Zemo Apkhazeti''; , ''Apsny khykh'twi'') is an official
Georgian name for a mountainous district in northeastern
Abkhazia, a breakaway republic, which is internationally recognized as an
autonomous republic within Georgia.
[1] It is currently the only part of Abkhazia controlled by the central Georgian authorities and the
de jure government of the Autonomous Republic of Abkhazia.
[2] The village of
Chkhalta is an administrative center of Upper Abkhazia.
Geographically, Upper Abkhazia comprises the upper
Kodori Valley, the
Chkhalta Ridge, and the
Marukhi Pass on the border with the
Russian Federation. Populated by some 2,000 people, chiefly ethnic
Georgians (
Svans), the area occupies approximately 17 percent of Abkhazia’s territory and is of high strategic importance due to its proximity to the Abkhaz-held capital of
Sukhumi, and other important cities in the region.
The term ''Upper Abkhazia'' has been largely used by the Georgian officials and media since the successful July
2006 operation of Georgian forces in the Kodori Valley which established firmer Georgian presence in the region.
[3]Prior to that, the Georgian government had exercised a very loose control over Kodori even though the
Abkhaz separatist forces had never been able to penetrate the valley, and the area had largely been run, since
1994, by the local
warlord Emzar Kvitsiani who was dislodged in the above mentioned Georgian police operation.
On
September 27, 2006, on the 13th anniversary of the fall of Sukhumi to the Abkhaz rebels and their allies from the
Northern Caucasus (
1993) the Kodori region and the adjacent pieces of land governed by Georgia were officially renamed into Upper Abkhazia and declared as a "temporary administrative center" of Abkhazia and the headquarters of the de jure Abkhazian government.
[4]In spite of Abkhaz and Russian protests, a new office of the de jure government was inaugurated, on the same day, by a high ranking delegation from Georgia's capital
Tbilisi, including
President Mikheil Saakashvili and the
Catholicos Patriarch Ilia II.
[5]
The area is currently undergoing a major rehabilitation program, including the reconstruction of infrastructure and reinforcement of security services. The
Central Election Commission of Georgia has recently established the constituency in Upper Abkhazia, allowing the population of the area, for the first time in the recent history of Georgia, take part in the
Georgian local elections, 2006.
[6]
References
1. United Nations Resolution on Abkhazia, April 2004, Res #65812
2. http://eng.primenewsonline.com/?c=123&a=9976
3. http://www.mfa.gov.ge/index.php?lang_id=ENG&sec_id=30&info_id=2261
4. http://www.georgiatoday.ge/
5. Tbilisi Turns Kodori into 'Temporary Administrative Center' of Abkhazia, ''Civil Georgia'', September 27, 2006.
6. ''First time in the history of Georgia the population of Kodori gorge will elect the representative body'', The Central Election Commission of Georgia website, September 3, 2006.
See also
★
Kodori Valley
★
Smaller Abkhazia