GEORGIA's FAR-RIGHT PROBLEM

Text and photographs by Onnik James Krikorian

It should have been a night like any other for Vitali Safarov. The 25-year-old civil rights activist had gone to a bar in central Tbilisi to socialize when he got into an argument with two neo-Nazi gang members. The altercation soon took a fatal turn and, in the early hours of Sept. 30, 2018, 21-year-old Avtandil Kandelakishvili and 24-year-old Giorgi Sokhadze killed the young Georgian human rights defender, stabbing him 10 times.

The latter of the two assailants, better known to his acquaintances as “Slayer,” was known to have fascist leanings while the other also had a swastika tattoo. A key witness in their trial also testified that the pair made anti-Semitic remarks as they killed Safarov, who was of Jewish and Yazidi descent. Despite the attackers’ racial epithets, the court failed to qualify Safarov’s murder as a hate crime.

Ultimately, the court sentenced Kandelakishvili and Sokhadze to 15 years in prison in June. Safarov’s family, however, intends to appeal the decision, with the victim’s mother, Marina Alanakyan, noting her determination to understand why her son was killed. 

Others in civil society are just as eager to discover why the government and police have failed to address the increasingly visible problem of far-right radicalization in the country. Indeed, with authorities often turning a blind eye to neo-Nazi activities and the unpopular government opening the way for more ultraconservative groupings to enter parliament and spread their views, Georgia stands on the verge of a shift much further to the right.

A Reality Ignored

To date, violent extremism in Georgia has only been framed in the context of the Islamic State, Syria and the country’s minority Muslim population. Even so, there are few effective projects to counter violent extremism in the country – none of which deal with far-right disengagement or deradicalization.

The Tolerance and Diversity Institute (TDI), for example, noted in a press release that neo-Nazi groups had been active around Tbilisi’s Freedom Square for at least a year, specifically targeting bars and foreigners. Moreover, they alleged that police consistently failed to respond to complaints, including those involving the two neo-Nazis responsible for Safarov’s murder.

“This was a truly tragic and fatal result of unpunished hate crimes around us,” said Agit Mirzoev, who works for the Center for Participation and Democracy (CPD) – for whom Safarov once worked as well. “We have been systematically talking about the dangers of [far-right] radicalization for the last four or five years, but neither the public nor the government has displayed a proper response to these concerns.”

In fact, it was only when Georgians awoke to the news of the Christchurch mosque massacres in March and saw photographs of Georgian script — along with Cyrillic, Armenian and Latin — scrawled on the shooter’s weapons that many began to worry about the possible connection between the Georgian far-right and radicals overseas. One of the names inscribed on attacker Brenton Tarrant’s armaments was that of David the Builder, the Georgian king who led Georgian forces to victory over the Seljuk Turks at the Battle of Didgori in 1121. David, his flag and 1121 have all become touchstones for far-right groups like the Georgian March, whose members have made the king’s unicorn flag their main symbol and begun to wear T-shirts bearing the date of the Battle of Didgori.

Immediately following the New Zealand massacres, the Georgian government vowed to investigate any possible links between the country’s neo-Nazis and far-right militants abroad. Since then, however, there has been no progress.

The Christchurch attacker’s manifesto appeared to borrow heavily from that of Anders Breivik, the far-right terrorist who killed 77, including one Georgian citizen, in a bomb attack in Oslo and a massacre on Utoya in Norway in July 2011. Both assailants appear to have been fascinated with Georgia and other Christian countries that shared a historical enmity with Muslims. Both, too, were obsessed with the “Great Replacement,” a far-right conspiracy theory that non-Europeans are taking the place of white Europeans. Today, the Great Replacement is a key narrative among far-right groups in Georgia and elsewhere.

One Georgian site, MyStar, even translated the works of David Lane, a member of the U.S. domestic terrorist organization The Order, into Georgian. In the wider world, Lane is better known for his 14 words, “We must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children,” which has become a mantra for white supremacists and neo-Nazis the world over. Meanwhile, another MyStar post quoted the Old Testament to justify the execution of children in Nazi Germany. The site did not renew its hosting at the beginning of this year, and the domain is now used to sell wallets and handbags.

Nevertheless, other sites continue to post similar content. One such group is the neo-Nazi Georgian Power, which is prolific in its dissemination of alt-right memes depicting Pepe the Frog, references to the red and blue pills from “The Matrix” (which has been appropriated by the far-right), and patriarchal images of “pure” women. It has also adopted Lane’s 14 words as a Georgian hashtag on Facebook.

Most recently, ultra-conservative and nationalist groups such as the neo-Nazi National Unity and the populist Georgian March have also stepped up their activities. In May last year, both groups converged on the Georgian parliament to face off with nightclub patrons who were protesting a particularly heavy-handed police raid on the city’s famous Bassiani Club.

Despite the show of force, neither Sandro Bregadze (Georgian March’s leader) nor Giorgi Chelidze (the head of National Unity) faced any changes at the time. In fact, it was only in September 2018 that authorities prosecuted Chelidze for the illegal possession of munitions – an act that came to light after he posted a photo on Facebook of himself and others training with semi-automatic weapons. In the court trial that followed, Chelidze and his supporters made Nazi salutes in the courtroom, imitating Breivik during his trial. Nevertheless, the court only sentenced the National Unity leader to 3.5 years in jail in May 2019.

Moreover, the Georgian government failed to show any interest in tackling the problem of far-right radicalization, even though Tbilisi hosted an Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) seminar in June on countering violent extremism.

The country’s former human rights ombudsperson, Ucha Nanuashvili, accused the government of maintaining a double standard, displaying inconsistencies in the fight against extremism and merely reacting in exceptional cases — and even then, only inadequately. “There is no coordination of state institutions in this regard, and the impression is that the authorities are not aware of the devastating effects that are caused by encouraging these groups.”

In June, for example, the Interior Ministry refused to provide security for Tbilisi’s LGBTQI community for the first-ever Pride event in what remains a country with conservative mores. Undeterred, organizers said they would hold the event anyway, even as far-right and ultranationalist groups threatened violence in response. Even the Georgian Orthodox Church called for calm but warned that any violence would be the fault of the Pride organizers.

Enter The Demagogue 

After a tense standoff between ultraconservative groups and LGBTQI activists outside the State Chancellory on June 14, millionaire businessman and demagogue Levan Vasadze announced two days later that he was forming vigilante groups to identify and abduct anyone considered likely to attend or support Tbilisi Pride. Despite violating Article 223 of the Criminal Code, Vasadze has yet to be prosecuted.

Georgian ultranationalists deny having any links to Moscow, said Nanuashvili. “However, their talking points are similar to those of Russian far-right groups and represent Russian ‘soft power.’ Most of these groups are truly anti-Russian, but relatively large and influential groups such as Georgian March and other organizations united around leaders such as Vasadze cannot hide their pro-Russian attitudes.”

CPD Director George Marjanishvili, meanwhile, is not surprised by the lack of action from authorities. “Vasadze represents a pretty influential group in Georgia,” he said.

“It is a group that has support from the Georgian Orthodox Church and the patriarch himself,” he said. “Most of society views him as the ‘megaphone’ of the Georgian Patriarchate so the government tries to avoid any controversy with him precisely because of this influence. Vasadze can create bigger problems for the government than the opposition, so the government usually chooses to bury its head in the sand.”

Of more concern, according to critics, is speculation that the government might use such far-right groups politically. “It’s quite clear that the government occasionally uses these groups to frighten and demonize liberal and other groups with different opinions from them,” said Nanuashvili. “All of this reinforces the assumption that these groups have the favor and support of some government officials.”

This also raises fears about next year’s parliamentary elections. With its popularity at the lowest in years, the ruling Georgian Dream party is currently polling at just 21 percent, according to a recent poll from the National Democratic Institute, just six points higher than the opposition United National Movement (UNM).

With public discontent growing, especially in the wake of violent anti-government protests on June 20 and daily rallies since, Georgian Dream’s founder, the billionaire Bidzina Ivanishvili, has acceded to one of the demonstrators’ demands, namely, that he bring forward plans to implement proportional representation to next year, instead of 2024.

Crucially, Ivanishvili has also decided to abort initial plans to fix the electoral threshold, meaning there will be no barrier to parliamentary representation. “We know that these groups have political ambitions, and I think this is concerning in light of changing the electoral system,” said Marjanishvili. “Now the minimum barrier is almost non-existent and they probably have enough supporters to gain seats in the Georgian parliament, achieve legitimization and use parliament for spreading hate and xenophobia.”

In 2013, Tabula forecast such a scenario. “The current government is friendly toward [Vasadze] and he thus has full freedom to act,” the magazine wrote. “Of primary importance, however, is how influential this new political actor will become and what degree of harm he will inflict on Georgia’s interests and security.”

Tabula’s call has been prophetic: In the six years since, the views of Vasadze and the rest of Georgia’s far-right have wormed their way further into society. And as things stand now, their influence is only likely to increase.


First published by Stratfor, August 2019

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