Saturday, May 26, 2012


Caucasus Report

Medvedev Endorses Kremlin's Candidate In South Ossetian Presidential Run Off

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev (right) meets with South Ossetian presidential candidate Anatoly Bibilov in Vladikavkaz.
TEXT SIZE - +
With less than a week to to go before the South Ossetian election run off to find a successor to outgoing de facto President Eduard Kokoity, Russian leader Dmitry Medvedev met on November 21 in Vladikavkaz with Anatoly Bibilov, the Kremlin's preferred candidate. Nonetheless, it is questionable whether Medvedev's expression of support will be enough to secure a Bibilov victory over his rival, opposition candidate Alla Dzhioyeva.

In the first round of voting on November 13, Bibilov polled just 14 votes more than Dzhioyeva: 6,066 and 6,052 respectively (24.86 and 24.8 percent of the votes cast). The candidates backed by Kokoity -- state bakery network head Vadim Tskhovrebov, Tskhinvali first deputy mayor Alan Kotayev, and State Media Committee Chairman Georgi Kabisov -- placed third, fourth and sixth respectively of the total 11 candidates with 9.9, 9.66, and 7.62 percent of the vote.

Tskhovrebov and Kotayev have since appealed to their supporters to vote for Bibilov in the run off. Kabisov has not yet expressed support for either candidate.

The results of the first round were clearly a shock and an unpleasant surprise for both Kokoity and Bibilov. Kokoity was quoted by the Russian daily "Moskovsky komsomolets" the following day as flatly ruling out the possibility of a woman becoming South Ossetian president.

"Women are treated well in our society and they are respected, but the Caucasus is the Caucasus," he said.

Specter Of A Civil War

Bibilov, for his part, construed the outcome as a massive vote of no-confidence in Kokoity. At the same time, he implied that Dzhioyeva, a former education minister and an articulate, if not particularly charismatic speaker, is not an independent political figure, but a puppet in the hands of others.

Bibilov's main rival for the South Ossetian presidency Alla Dzhioyeva
x
Bibilov's main rival for the South Ossetian presidency Alla Dzhioyeva
​​Bibilov even raised the specter of a civil war in the event of a Dzhioyeva victory. "There are people in South Ossetia ready to take up arms and head for the forest [to fight a guerrilla war] if the people behind Dzhioyeva come to power," he warned.

Dzhioyeva's most influential backers are former South Ossetian Defense Minister Lieutenant General Anatoly Barankevich and Russian freestyle wrestling team trainer Djambolat Tedeyev.

Tedeyev, who is reportedly hugely popular, threw his support behind Dzhioyeva after he himself was denied registration as a presidential candidate.

At the same time, Bibilov is making every effort to demonstrate, first, that he is no one's pawn, and second, that the outgoing authorities are yesterday's men.

Dzhioyeva Supporters Remain Upbeat

Bibilov has also pledged to bring to trial those responsible for embezzling much of the billions of rubles Moscow allocated for the reconstruction of infrastructure damaged or destroyed during the August 2008 war that culminated in Russia's formal recognition of the breakaway region as an independent state.

Dzhioyeva's backers, however, seem upbeat, and even regard Medvedev's endorsement of Bibilov as a joke.

Elina Marzoyeva, the chairman of Tedeyev's National Front of South Ossetia, commented that "only a candidate with little confidence in himself, and the gentlemen from Moscow who have even less confidence in his chances of winning, would undertake such incredible efforts."

A poll conducted by the opposition website uasamonga.ru suggests the Dzhioyeva camp has every reason to be upbeat.

Of 580 respondents to date, 498 (85.9 percent) said they will vote for Dzhioyeva and only 82 (14.1 percent) for Bibilov. On the other hand, the election outcome could be determined by cautious voters who may equate Bibilov with stability and, above all, with continued financial aid from Moscow.
This forum has been closed.
Comment Sorting
Comments
     
by: Jack from: US
November 23, 2011 20:36
Congratulations to people of South Ossetia on having truly democratic and free elections. It shows how freedom-minded people can break away from backward and despicable dictatorship like rump "republic of Georgia" and build true democracy. Entities like "republic of Georgia" can only exist as dictatorships propped up by US government, because everyone wants to break free from that dictatorship.
In Response

by: Max from: Washington
November 24, 2011 04:39
South Ossetia and Abkhazia will never be "true democracies" until hundreds of thousands of people who have been ethnically cleansed from these areas are allowed to return and take part in these so called elections. You cannot cleanse the regions of half the electorate and then proclaim democratic victory.

by: mike from: Iowa USA
November 24, 2011 14:23
Jack, since you so seem to hate Saakashvili and his "rump" republic, my question is, how long have you spent in the place? And why the infatuation with desperate little Russian-sponsored backwater dumps? Any post Soviet space has a lot of strides to make overcoming decades of bad economics, bad management, etc, what is there to cheer about unless someone gets elected there who might actually see fit to bridge the impasse between Georgia and themselves, not just a Russian pawn.

by: Jack from: US
November 24, 2011 15:45
no matter how much "republic of Georgians" bark at and envy free people of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, the course of history will not be reversed. No petty dictators of "rupublic of Georgia" or their patrons in Washington have the right or ability to deny freedom to people of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. US government lost any credibility in matters of democracy and freedom by consistently supporting despicable dictatorships, from rump "republic of Georgia" to Saudi Arabia to Pakistan to Kosovo to Bahrain to Jordan to Egypt.. count and count.

by: Slave of God from: USA
November 25, 2011 00:10
Time to give democracy and right for self-determination to Chechnya, Ingushetia, Dagestan, Karachaevo-Cherkessia, and Kabardino-Balkaria.
In Response

by: Jack from: US
November 25, 2011 15:48
I think Russians would be much better off separating from backward and poor Muslim provinces where corruption, filth, poverty and violence is endemic. Maybe Putin would sell Chechnya to US? US government is so friendly to Muslims, why stop at importing thousands of them into this country and turning whole neighborhoods into Gaza strips, why not take a whole Muslim terrotory of Chechnya as 52nd US state?

About This Blog

Written by analyst Liz Fuller, the "Caucasus Report" blog will offer the sort of in-depth analysis that was the hallmark of the "RFE/RL Caucasus Report." It also aims, to borrow a metaphor from Tom de Waal, to act as a smoke detector, focusing attention on potential conflict situations and crises throughout the region.