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South Ossetian Opposition Leader Offers Compromise Solution To Standoff


Opposition leader Alla Dzhioyeva has offered to call off the protests if she is named interim president until the repeat election.
Opposition leader Alla Dzhioyeva has offered to call off the protests if she is named interim president until the repeat election.
With support for outgoing de facto South Ossetian President Eduard Kokoity crumbling, Alla Dzhioyeva, the apparent winner of the election to choose his successor, has proposed a solution to the deadlock precipitated by the Supreme Court's annulment of the results of the November 27 runoff ballot in the breakaway Gerogian region.

But Kokoity appears determined to cling to power, at the risk of a confrontation if Dzhioyeva's supporters make good on their stated intention to stage her public inauguration as president on December 10.

Dzhioyeva told journalists on December 8 after the ninth round of Kremlin-mediated talks between the two camps that she had offered to halt the public protests by her supporters in Tskhinvali if Kokoity stepped down and acknowledged her as interim president. She would then guarantee the holding of the repeat presidential election.

Kokoity for his part acknowledged on December 8 that his presidential term had expired. But he said he would relinquish power only after the "Orange Revolution," meaning Dzhioyeva's supporters' public protests, ended.

'Gang Of Four' Holds On

Kokoity's position has been weakened this week by calls by deputy parliament speakers Mira Tskhovrebova and Yury Dzitstsoity for him to step down when his term in office expired on December 7. Eight more of the total 30 parliament deputies, including former speaker Stanislav Kochiyev, formally endorsed Tskhovrebova's statement. Only political parties unequivocally loyal to Kokoity were allowed to participate in the May 2009 parliamentary elections.

In an address to the population on December 6, Kokoity admitted that "we can see how intense the protest mood is," and that "the organs of state power have not performed ideally, there have been numerous failings and omissions for which specific officials are to blame."

Kokoity then proceeded to dismiss two government ministers, the mayors of Tskhinvali and Kvaisa, a local district-council head, and State Communications and Media Committee head Georgy Kabisov. Some observers identified Kabisov as one of the presidential candidates Kokoity was backing in the first round; he placed sixth out of 11 candidates with 7.62 percent of the vote.

Kokoity did not, however, meet the opposition's demand for the dismissal of any of his fellow members of what the opposition has branded "the Gang of Four": Prosecutor-General Taymuraz Khugayev, his deputy Eldar Kokoyev, and Supreme Court Chairman Atsamaz Bichenov.

Dzhioyeva's announcement on December 8 of the creation of a People's Front to back Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's candidacy in the presidential election next March suggests that she has given up all hope of support from incumbent Russian President Dmitry Medvedev. But she would be naive to place any hopes in Putin, especially in light of his statement several months ago that South Ossetia could at some point become a subject of the Russian Federation.

Dzhioyeva is not participating in the December 9 Russian-mediated negotiations in Tskhinvali.

About This Blog

This blog presents analyst Liz Fuller's personal take on events in the region, following on from her work in 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. The views are the author's own and do not represent those of RFE/RL.

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