Resettlement of Ecological Migrants in Georgia: Recent Developments and Trends in Policy, Implementation, and Perceptions Justin Lyle

Resettlement of Ecological Migrants in Georgia: Recent Developments and Trends in Policy, Implementation, and Perceptions Justin Lyle

Resettlement of Ecological Migrants in Georgia: Recent Developments and Trends in Policy, Implementation, and Perceptions Justin Lyle ECMI WORKING PAPER #53 January 2012 ECMI- Working Paper The European Centre for Minority Issues (ECMI) is a non-partisan institution founded in 1996 by the Governments of the Kingdom of Denmark, the Federal Republic of Germany, and the German State of Schleswig-Holstein. ECMI was established in Flensburg, at the heart of the Danish-German border region, in order to draw from the encouraging example of peaceful coexistence between minorities and majorities achieved here. ECMI‟s aim is to promote interdisciplinary research on issues related to minorities and majorities in a European perspective and to contribute to the improvement of interethnic relations in those parts of Western and Eastern Europe where ethnopolitical tension and conflict prevail. ECMI Working Papers are written either by the staff of ECMI or by outside authors commissioned by the Centre. As ECMI does not propagate opinions of its own, the views expressed in any of its publications are the sole responsibility of the author concerned. ECMI Working Paper European Centre for Minority Issues (ECMI) Director: Dr. Tove H. Malloy © ECMI 2012 2 | P a g e ECMI- Working Paper Resettlement of Ecological Migrants in Georgia: Recent Developments and Trends in Policy, Implementation, and Perceptions Since the early 1980s, climate change has exacerbated a trend of migration from densely populated mountainous areas in Georgia, chiefly in the Svaneti and Adjara regions, where the livelihoods of the mountain populations have increasingly been threatened by natural disasters. Over the past thirty years, tens of thousands of people have been made homeless as a result of flooding, landslides, and avalanches. However, the needs of so-called ecological migrants, or eco-migrants, i.e., people who have been displaced from their homes due to natural disasters, are a severely neglected issue in Georgia. Justin Lyle, January 2012 ECMI Working Paper #53 I. INTRODUCTION activities of international organisations in this Various Georgian government administrations have emerging field of humanitarian work. From here it attempted to respond to natural disasters in these introduces government approaches and efforts to mountain regions, from the Soviet authorities in the address the needs of eco-migrants from the early 1980s 1980s through to the present Saakashvili to the „Rose Revolution,‟ before presenting initiatives administration. Although in the early and mid 1980s, under the Presidency of Mikheil Saakashvili in more the process of resettlement was fairly well organised, detail. Building on an in-depth 2007 monograph on the late 1980s brought a serious increase of natural ecological migration of the European Centre for disasters in Georgia‟s mountain regions, which Minority Issues (ECMI),1 the paper then focuses on coincided with the breakdown of Soviet structures to the assessment and resettlement procedures followed address the growing needs. The government of Zviad by the responsible division within the State Ministry of Gamsakhurdia used eco-migrants as tools in an agenda Internally Displaced Persons from the Occupied of “demographic balancing”, resettling eco-migrants to Territories, Accommodation and Refugees (MRA), minority-inhabited and border regions of the country in followed by the local-level example of the municipal order to „Georgianise‟ them. Under Shevardnadze the authorities in Khulo district in Adjara. The next section eco-migration issue was literally ignored. Following presents case studies of eco-migrant resettlement from the 2003 „Rose Revolution‟, the Saakashvili Adjara to the Kvemo Kartli, Samtskhe-Javakheti and government has taken several meaningful steps to Kakheti regions of Georgia. The research consisted of address the problems of eco-migrants, but a consistent qualitative interviews with two members of staff from and coherent policy supported with adequate resources the Department of Migration, Repatriation and to address eco-migration is still out of sight. Based on research and field work conducted from October 2010 to March 2011, this paper starts 1 Trier, T. and M. Turashvili.: Resettlement of Ecologically with a brief overview of the legal basis for addressing Displaced Persons: Solution of a Problem or Creation of a the needs of ecological migrants in international and New? Eco-Migration in Georgia 1981 – 2006, Monograph domestic law, and then summarises the limited #6, Flensburg: ECMI, August 2007, <http://www.ecmicaucasus.org/upload/publications/monogr aph_6_en.pdf>. 3 | P a g e ECMI- Working Paper Refugee Issues at the MRA, and with between five and This clearly situates the issue of ecological ten heads of household, who had received state displacement within the international normative resettlement assistance, in each resettlement case study framework that governs IDPs. However, Georgia‟s location. These eco-migrants, interviewed in Khulo domestic legislation on Internally Displaced Persons district of Adjara, Marneuli district of Kvemo-Kartli, does not include natural disasters among the Ninotsminda district of Samtskhe-Javakheti, and admissible grounds for IDP status.3 This definition Lagodekhi and Akhmeta districts of Kakheti, were leaves ecological migrants with no protection in asked to explain their experience and perceptions of Georgian national law. This lack of legal status in turn the state resettlement process, from the occurrence of implies no legal obligation on the state to offer the the natural disaster through to final resettlement and same protection to eco-migrants that it does to IDPs. reception in the host community. These cases offer This shortcoming needs to be addressed. One concrete examples of resettlement policy in action and means of securing robust obligations in law for state the ongoing problems associated with it. The final protection of eco-migrants in Georgia would be to section provides policy recommendations for the extend the domestic law definition of Internally immediate future and the long term, to enhance the Displaced Persons (in line with the 1998 UN Guiding eco-migration resettlement process in Georgia. Principles) to include natural disaster as an admissible criterion for IDP status. Alternatively, a new law II. THE LEGAL AND OPERATIONAL dedicated exclusively to regulating eco-migration CONTEXT could be adopted. International Actors and Ecological Ecological Migrants in International and Displacement Domestic Law International organisations such as the UN Refugee The UN Refugee Agency UNHCR distinguishes Agency UNHCR are not currently involved in ecological migrants from refugees by the fact that, addressing eco-migrant issues. The UNHCR mandate unlike refugees, „environmentally-displaced persons‟ for refugees and IDPs does not at present include can usually count on the protection of their own state. persons displaced by ecological disasters. UNHCR is, Since ecological migrants usually remain within the however, concerned about the environmental borders of their own state, rather than crossing a state implications of refugee and IDP resettlement, and is, border – a key criterion for refugee status in most importantly, increasingly considering ecological 4 international law – ecological migrants are generally displacement itself as a future area of its work. grouped with Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs). Ecological migration in Georgia today receives Indeed, the legally-non-binding but normative little attention from international donors, including landmark 1998 Guiding Principles on Internal large donor agencies such as the European Union and Displacement, presented by the UN Secretary USAID. At present only the relevant national ministry General‟s representative for displaced persons, (MRA) and a small number of NGOs are active on the includes victims of natural disasters in its definition of eco-migration issue in Georgia. internally displaced persons: (…) internally displaced persons are persons III. ECO-MIGRANT RESETTLEMENT AND or groups of persons who have been forced or obliged to flee or to leave their homes or places of habitual GOVERNMENT PROGRAMMES IN residence, in particular as a result of or in order to GEORGIA avoid the effects of armed conflict, situations of generalized violence, violations of human rights or Soviet-Era Resettlement natural or human-made disasters, and who have not crossed an internationally recognized State border. 2 3 See the law at <http://www.unhcr.org/home/RSDLEGAL/44ab85324.pdf>. 4 UNHCR Policy Paper: Climate change, natural disasters 2 See the full text of the Guiding Principles on Internal and human displacement: a UNHCR perspective, Displacement at Environment, 14 August 2009, <http://www.brookings.edu/fp/projects/idp/resources/GPEng <http://www.unhcr.org/4901e81a4.html>. lish.pdf>. 4 | P a g e ECMI- Working Paper During the early 1980s Soviet state resettlement of areas were often extremely tense, and many eco- eco-migrants in Georgia was relatively well organised, migrants either sold or abandoned their new with adequate resources committed to the issue. houses to return to their native regions. Between 1981 and 1990 the dense minority-populated Under Shevardnadze the issue of eco- Samtskhe-Javakheti and Kvemo Kartli regions migrants was almost completely ignored. During received the majority of eco-migrants, with around the privatisation process of agricultural land in 5 3,000 families resettled to villages there. From

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