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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>