Declaration of the Revolutionary Committee of the Soviet Socialist Republic of Georgia on Independence of the Soviet Socialist Republic of Abkhazia

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  • 8/14/2019 Declaration of the Revolutionary Committee of the Soviet Socialist Republic of Georgia on Independence of the Soviet Socialist Republic of Abkhazia

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    DECLARATION OF THE REVOLUTIONARY COMMITTEE OF THE SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLIC

    OF GEORGIA ON INDEPENDENCE OF THE SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLIC OF ABKHAZIA.

    21 May 1921

    The Mensheviks power, being bourgeois by its nature, oppressed the revolutionary movement of the

    national minorities and bred the antagonism between the certain minorities residing in Georgia

    throughout the centuries.

    Soviet power has a different approach to this issue, advancing the principle of fraternal relations and

    equality between all workers.

    The right to self-determination declared by the Great October Revolution is recognized as the best

    remedy for the eradication of national prejudices and the strengthening of relations between the

    workers.

    On this basis, the Revolutionary Committee of the Soviet Socialist Republic of Georgia recognizes and

    welcomes the establishment of the Soviet Socialist Republic of Abkhazia and believes that the

    relations between the Georgian SSR and the Abkhazian SSR will be decided at the first Congress of

    the workers and peasants of Abkhazia, as well as of Georgia.

    Let the workers of both socialist republics decide the forms of close and fraternal cooperation.

    Revcom of the Georgian SSR

    In 1921, Abkhazia and Georgia became Sovietized. On 31 March 1921, an independent Soviet

    Republic of Abkhazia was proclaimed. On 21 May 1921, the Georgian Bolshevik government officially

    recognized the independence of Abkhazia. But the same year, under pressure from Stalin and other

    influential Georgian Bolsheviks, Abkhazia was forced to conclude a union (i.e., confederative) treaty

    with Georgia. Abkhazia still remained a full union republic until 1931, when its status was downgraded,

    under Stalin's orders, from that of Union Republic to that of an Autonomous Republic within Georgia.

    This act of incorporation of Abkhazia into Georgia was conducted without the approval and against the

    will of the Abkhazian people and caused mass protests in Abkhazia. Thus the creation of the

    Abkhazian Autonomous Republic within Georgia was not the result of the granting by the Bolsheviks of

    autonomous status to one of the republic's minorities, as it is often alleged, but was rather the forced

    convergence of two neighbouring states by the incorporation of one of them, Abkhazia, into the other,

    Georgia.

    Vladislav Ardzinba, first president of Abkhazia, stated: In 1931 Abkhazia was transformed into an

    autonomous republic within the Georgian SSR. Seemingly it was the only republic whose political

    status changed under pressure from Stalin not upwards but downwards. (Pravda, newspaper, 14 July

    1989).