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- <text id=91TT2195>
- <title>
- Sep. 30, 1991: Soviet Union:Paranoia Run Amuck
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Sep. 30, 1991 Curing Infertility
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 43
- SOVIET UNION
- Paranoia Run Amuck
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Georgia's president sees conspiracies everywhere, but he is
- largely to blame for the restiveness
- </p>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe--Reported by Kevin Fedarko/Washington and Ann M.
- Simmons/Tbilisi
- </p>
- <p> To hear Georgian president Zviad Gamsakhurdia tell it,
- conspiracies seethe around him. At the national level, Mikhail
- Gorbachev is scheming to "create a civil war" in the southern
- republic with the help of "40,000 KGB agents," while fellow
- Georgian Eduard Shevardnadze, the former Soviet Foreign
- Minister, is a "provocateur." At the state level, Tengiz Sigua,
- the Georgian prime minister until six weeks ago, is "a liar and
- a criminal" who, Gamsakhurdia says, "is making a coup against
- me." At the grass-roots level, the thousands who now take to the
- streets daily demanding Gamsakhurdia's resignation are all
- "plotters" and "criminals." Even Washington is colluding with
- Moscow, hatching a "kind of Molotov-Ribbentrop agreement" to
- deny Georgian independence.
- </p>
- <p> With each new charge, Gamsakhurdia sounds increasingly
- paranoid. True, he legitimately has much to fear. Many of the
- very same Georgians who elected Gamsakhurdia president of their
- republic just last May are now demanding his ouster. The
- republic's prime minister and foreign minister have quit the
- president's cabinet, accusing him of dictatorial practices that
- block democratic and market reform. And tensions in South
- Ossetia and Adzhar, two Georgian regions where ethnic
- populations are demanding autonomy, threaten Gamsakhurdia's
- vision of a unified, independent state. Just one month after the
- entire Soviet Union rocked with revolution, Gamsakhurdia, 52,
- has a homegrown revolution brewing. But the main culprit in all
- this is not antidemocratic conspirators--it is Gamsakhurdia.
- </p>
- <p> Given the ethnic and political hostilities that have long
- festered in many republics beneath a veil of repression, it was
- inevitable that the breakup of the Soviet Union would quickly
- unleash unsavory nationalistic forces. Of the many republic
- presidents now grappling with restive populations, Gamsakhurdia
- has been among the quickest to resort to authoritarian tactics.
- On Sept. 2 his interior-ministry troops fired on
- anti-Gamsakhurdia protesters. The next week Gamsakhurdia jammed
- all Soviet and Russian broadcasts to the republic. Last week,
- as some 30 opposition groups brought more than 20,000 people
- into the streets, police arrested three opposition leaders after
- their Moscow-bound plane was ordered to return to the capital
- city of Tbilisi. Angry Georgians responded by occupying the
- state's radio and television center, cutting off Gamsakhurdia
- as he broadcast a presidential address.
- </p>
- <p> It is hard to believe that Gamsakhurdia could have dug
- such a hole for himself in a mere four months. When he
- engineered Georgia's declaration of independence while serving
- as chairman of the Georgian supreme soviet last April, he was
- hailed as a patriot. In May, when he took 87% of the vote,
- becoming the republic's first democratically elected president,
- he was regarded as a modern-day St. George who had defeated the
- dragon of Soviet imperialism. Given Gamsakhurdia's reputation
- as a distinguished literary scholar and his activism on behalf
- of human rights, comparisons with Czechoslovakia's President
- Vaclav Havel did not seem too much of a stretch.
- </p>
- <p> These days the comparisons are far less flattering. At
- rallies, protesters chant "Ceausescu, Ceausescu!" Gamsakhurdia
- apparently takes seriously the reference to Romania's toppled,
- and summarily executed, dictator. For the past three weeks he
- has barricaded himself inside the Georgian parliament, where he
- is guarded by hundreds of National Guardsmen. When he ventures
- out, it is in one of two bulletproof Mercedes, for which
- Gamsakhurdia spent $460,000. But he bristles at being compared
- with the Romanian. "These people do not know what a dictator
- really is," he fumes, his dark eyes smoldering. "Could you
- really imagine such actions and demonstrations if I was a
- dictator?"
- </p>
- <p> Maybe not, but Gamsakhurdia is doing a mighty credible
- imitation. He has closed opposition newspapers, capriciously
- fired government officials and seized control of most
- ministries. To quiet the republic's balking minorities--Armenians, Abkhasians and Kurds, as well as the increasingly
- restless Ossetians and Adzharis--he has suggested that
- qualification for Georgian citizenship should be based on family
- lines that trace back to 1801, the year Georgia became part of
- czarist Russia. He has even stated that mixed marriages threaten
- the purity of the Georgian race.
- </p>
- <p> Detractors also charge that Gamsakhurdia is running
- Georgia's economy into the ground. "Five months have been wasted
- since independence was declared," says opposition leader Irakli
- Shenghelaia. "By now, Georgia should have proved itself ready
- for investments, for international ties, for peace and order."
- Instead the republic's economy is stuck on the same old
- treadmill: too many fruits and minerals but not enough
- export-oriented industry. Georgia still relies on imported
- grain, meat, sugar and dairy products to feed itself. Supplies
- have become so short that earlier this month Gamsakhurdia
- forbade the export of vegetables, meat and building materials.
- Charges former prime minister Sigua: "Gamsakhurdia has already
- destroyed the few sprouts of a free market economy that were
- beginning to show."
- </p>
- <p> Then there is the matter of Gamsakhurdia's behavior during
- the tense days surrounding the Aug. 19 coup attempt. On Aug. 20
- Interfax, an independent Soviet news service, reported that
- Gamsakhurdia had agreed to comply with Emergency Committee
- orders to disarm the Georgian National Guard. Gamsakhurdia
- dismisses the charge as the work of "common liars who want to
- slander me." But the fact remains that soon after the coup was
- set in motion, he ordered the National Guard into the
- countryside, supposedly on a training exercise. A large portion
- of the 15,000-strong guard ignored the order and holed up on a
- mountainside. Gamsakhurdia now maintains that the order was
- given to protect the guards from an impending attack by the
- Soviet "occupational" army, but the deserters have yet to
- return.
- </p>
- <p> Though the opposition ranks keep growing, it is impossible
- to gauge with any certainty the extent of the discontent. Some
- polls claim Gamsakhurdia's popularity has dwindled to just 20%.
- His followers counter that support for the president still runs
- as high as 80%. That sounds wildly optimistic, but there is no
- denying that the beleaguered president has his ardent
- advocates. The throngs that gather daily outside Gamsakhurdia's
- parliamentary refuge, packed mostly with women, drape banners
- that read DEAR ZVIAD. WE ARE WITH YOU.
- </p>
- <p> Certainly there is much in Gamsakhurdia's past to admire.
- The son of one of the republic's most venerated novelists,
- Gamsakhurdia refused to join the Communist Party. First arrested
- at 17 for "illegal patriotic activity," he helped found, in
- 1976, Georgia's Helsinki monitoring group to defend Georgian
- language, cultural monuments and prisoners' rights. The group
- also guarded the treasures of the Georgian Orthodox church from
- Communist Party plunderers, a deed that earned Gamsakhurdia
- almost mystical standing as a church guardian. For those
- activities he spent a year in solitary confinement. A subsequent
- five-year sentence was reduced to three after he told a court,
- "I sincerely regret what I have done and condemn the crime I
- have committed." Gamsakhurdia claims that he recanted only his
- efforts to distribute anti-Soviet propaganda, not his
- nationalist activities.
- </p>
- <p> Now Gamsakhurdia seems inclined to recant some of his more
- recent activities. Late last week he suggested that the
- government bears some "guilt" for the current crisis and offered
- to open a dialogue with opposition leaders. His foreign ministry
- has hired John Adams & Associates, a high-profile consulting
- firm in Washington, to burnish Gamsakhurdia's image and put his
- case for Georgian independence before the Bush Administration.
- Given that the U.S. was the 37th country to recognize the
- independence of the Baltics, it seems improbable that President
- Bush will lead the charge to legitimize Georgia's
- self-proclaimed status.
- </p>
- <p> No less important, Gamsakhurdia must sell himself anew to
- the Georgian people. That may not be easy. Two days after
- inviting a dialogue with the opposition, police again clashed
- with demonstrators. At least two people were injured.
- Gamsakhurdia insists he will not quit his post. "How can I
- resign when only a handful of people are demanding this?" he
- asks. "If all my voters demand that I resign, then I will
- resign, but only then." His opponents think otherwise. "He is
- in agony now," says Sigua. "He has made many ideological and
- political mistakes, and he may be beginning to realize this."
- Sigua's prognosis? "We believe Gamsakhurdia will flee."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-