Early history Between the 9th and 6th centuries BC, the territory of modern Abkhazia was part of the ancient
Kingdom of Colchis. Around the 6th century BC, the
Greeks established trade colonies along the
Black Sea coast of present-day Abkhazia, in particular at
Pitiunt and
Dioscurias.
Classical authors described various peoples living in the region and the great multitude of languages they spoke.
Arrian,
Pliny and
Strabo have given accounts of the
Abasgoi and
Moschoi peoples somewhere in modern Abkhazia on the eastern shore of the Black Sea. This region was subsequently absorbed in 63 BC into the
Kingdom of Laziǩa. According to an Eastern tradition,
Simon the Zealot died in Abkhazia during a missionary trip and was buried in
Nicopsis; his mortal remains were later transferred to
Anacopia.
Within the Roman and Byzantine Empires The
Roman Empire conquered
Lazica in the 1st century AD; however, the Roman presence was confined to port cities. According to
Arrian, the
Abasgoi and
Apsilae peoples were nominal Roman subjects, and there was a small Roman outpost in
Dioscurias. Abasgoi likely served in the Roman army in
Ala Prima Abasgorum, which was stationed in
Egypt. After the 4th century Lazica regained a measure of independence, but remained within the
Byzantine Empire's sphere of influence.
Anacopia was the principality's capital. The country was mostly Christian, with the archbishop's seat in
Pityus. Stratophilus, the Metropolitan of Pityus, participated in the
First Council of Nicaea in 325. Around the middle of the
6th century AD, the Byzantines and the neighbouring
Sassanid Persia fought for supremacy over Abkhazia, a conflict known as the
Lazic War. During the war the
Abasgians revolted against the Byzantine Empire and requested Sasanian assistance; the revolt was suppressed by General
Bessas. An Arab incursion into Abasgia, led by
Marwan II, was repelled by
Prince Leon I jointly with his Lazic and
Iberian allies in 736. Leon I then married
Mirian's daughter and a successor,
King Leon II exploited this dynastic union to acquire
Lazica in the 770s. in 1008 when Bagrat II of Abkhazia became
Bagrat III of Georgia. The successful defence against the
Arab Caliphate, and new territorial gains in the east gave the Abasgian princes enough power to claim more autonomy from the Byzantine Empire. Circa 778, Prince Leon II, with the help of the
Khazars, declared independence from the Byzantine Empire and transferred his residence to
Kutaisi. During this period the
Georgian language replaced
Greek as the language of literacy and culture.
Within the Kingdom of Georgia The
Kingdom of Abkhazia flourished between 850 and 950 AD, which ended by unification of Abkhazia and eastern Georgian states under a single
Georgian monarchy ruled by
King Bagrat III at the end of the 10th century and the beginning of the 11th century. During the reign of
Queen Tamar, Georgian chronicles mention
Otagho as the
Eristavi of Abkhazia. He was one of the first representatives of the
House of Shervashidze (also known as Chachba) which went on to rule Abkhazia until the 19th century. In the 1240s,
Mongols divided Georgia into eight military-administrative sectors (
tümens). The territory of contemporary Abkhazia formed part of the tümen administered by
Tsotne Dadiani.
Ottoman Influence In the 16th century, after the break-up of the Georgian Kingdom into small kingdoms and principalities, the
Principality of Abkhazia (nominally a vassal of the
Kingdom of Imereti) emerged, ruled by the
Shervashidze dynasty. The spread of Islam in Abkhazia was first evidenced by the Ottoman traveller
Evliya Çelebi in 1641. Despite this, the
Islamisation was more evident in the higher levels of society rather than the general population. In his work, Çelebi also wrote that the principal tribe of the Abkhazian principality, Chách, spoke the
Mingrelian language, a subset of
Kartvelian (Georgian) languages. Abkhazia sought protection from the
Russian Empire in 1801 but was declared "an autonomous
principality" by the Russians in 1810. Russia then annexed Abkhazia in 1864, and
Abkhaz resistance was quashed as the Russians deported Muslim Abkhaz to Ottoman territories. The first attempt to enter into relations with Russia was made by
Prince Kelesh-Bey in 1803, shortly after the incorporation of eastern Georgia into the expanding
Tsarist empire in 1801. However, pro-Ottoman sympathy in Abkhazia prevailed for a short time after Kelesh-Bey was assassinated by his son,
Aslan-Bey, in 1801. On 2 July 1810,
Russian Marines stormed Sukhum-Kale and had Aslan-Bey replaced with his rival and brother,
Sefer Ali-Bey, who had converted to Christianity and assumed the name of George. Abkhazia joined the Russian Empire as an autonomous principality, in 1810. The next
Russo-Turkish war (1828–1829) strongly enhanced the Russian positions, leading to a further split in the Abkhaz elite, mainly along religious divisions. During the
Crimean War (1853–1856), Russian forces had to evacuate Abkhazia and Prince
Hamud-Bey Sharvashidze-Chachba (Mikhail), who ruled from 1822 to 1864, seemingly switched to the Ottomans. Later on, the Russian presence strengthened and the
highlanders of Western Caucasia were finally subjugated by Russia in 1864. The autonomy of Abkhazia, which had functioned as a pro-Russian "buffer zone" in this troublesome region, was no longer needed by the Tsarist government and the rule of the Sharvashidze came to an end; in November 1864, Prince Mikhail (Hamud-Bey) was forced to renounce his rights and resettle in
Voronezh, Russia. Later that same year, Abkhazia was incorporated into the
Russian Empire as a special military province of Sukhum-Kale which was transformed, in 1883, into an
okrug as part of the
Kutaisi Governorate. Large numbers of Muslim Abkhazians, said to have constituted as much as 40% of the Abkhazian population, emigrated to the
Ottoman Empire between 1864 and 1878 together with other Muslim populations of the Caucasus, a process known as
Muhajirism. Some Georgian historians assert that Georgian tribes (
Svans and
Mingrelians) had populated Abkhazia since the time of the
Colchis kingdom. By official decision of the Russian authorities, the residents of Abkhazia and
Samurzakano had to study and pray in Russian. After the mass deportation of 1878, Abkhazians were left in the minority, officially branded "guilty people", and had no leader capable of mounting serious opposition to
Russification. On 17 March 1898, the synodal department of the Russian Orthodox Church of Georgia-Imereti, by Order 2771, again prohibited teaching and the conduct of religious services in Georgian. Mass protests by the Georgian population of Abkhazia and Samurzakano followed, news of which reached the Russian emperor. On 3 September 1898 the
Holy Synod issued Order 4880, which decreed that those parishes where the congregation was Mingrelian (i.e. Georgian), conduct both church services and church education in Georgian, while Abkhazian parishes use
old Slavic. In the Sukhumi district, this order was carried out in only three of 42 parishes. Transcaucasia declared its independence from Russia on 9 April 1918 as a
federative republic. On 8 May 1918, the Bolsheviks seized power in Abkhazia and disbanded the local Abkhaz People's Council. It requested aid from the Transcausian authorities, which dispatched the Georgian People's Guard and
defeated the rebels on 17 May. On 26 May 1918, Georgia declared independence from the Transcaucasian Federation, which dissolved on 28 May. On 8 June 1918, the Abkhaz People's Council signed a treaty with the Georgian National Council, which confirmed Abkhazia's status as an autonomy within the Georgian Democratic Republic. The Georgian army defeated another Bolshevik rebellion in the region. It remained part of Georgia after another Bolshevik revolt and a Turkish expedition were defeated in 1918. The Russian general and a leader of
White movement Anton Denikin laid claims on Abkhazia and captured
Gagra, but the Georgians counter-attacked in April 1919 and retook the city. Denikin's
Volunteer Army was eventually defeated by the
Red Army, and
Bolshevik Russia signed an agreement with Georgia in May 1920, recognising Abkhazia as a part of Georgia. In 1919, a first
election was held to the Abkhaz People's Council. The Council favoured being an autonomous region within Georgia, and it lasted until the
Red Army invasion of Georgia in February 1921. On 20 March 1919, the newly elected Abkhazian People's Council adopted the "Act on Abkhazian Autonomy", which formalised the establishment of the
Abkhazian Autonomy within the Georgian Democratic Republic.
Within the Soviet Union Caucasus (1957–91) showing the
Abkhaz ASSR within the
Georgian SSR. In 1921, the Bolshevik Red Army
invaded Georgia and ended its short-lived independence. Abkhazia was made a Socialist Soviet Republic (
SSR Abkhazia) with the ambiguous status of a "
treaty republic" associated with the
Georgian SSR. Under the
korenizatsiia policy of the Soviet Union, the Abkhaz people
were not considered the "advanced" people, and thus saw an increased focus on their national language and cultural development. Under this
nationalities policy, the Abkhaz received various benefits such as schooling in their language; the official literary language was established for the first time. Between 1922 and 1926, the share of Abkhazes increased from 19.8% to 27.8% of the population (possibly due to the immigration of ethnic Abkhaz from Turkey or re-identification as Abkhaz). Their share among the members of the local communist party grew from 10% to the 25%. Meanwhile, the proportion of the ethnic Georgian population decreased from 42% in 1922 to 36% in 1926, while their proportion in the local communist party also decreased from 40% to 33%. In 1925, a commission led by I. Azatian, an
Armenian, was sent by the
Transcaucasian central executive committee to investigate the situation in Abkhazia, and the commission reported that the Abkhaz authorities under
Nestor Lakoba were conducting the policy of Abkhazification, giving privileges to the ethnic Abkhazians and establishing an
oligarchic rule over Georgians, essentially conducting Abkhaz nationalist policy under the guise of communism. The report noted that all major posts were held by the Abkhaz, they were overrepresented in the local structures such as the police, and the local Komsomol was only admitting ethnic Abkhazians. In 1931,
Joseph Stalin made Abkhazia an autonomous republic (
Abkhaz ASSR) within the Georgian SSR.
Georgian Communist Party leader
Kandid Charkviani supported the Georgianization of Abkhazia. Starting from 1939, peasant households from the rest of the Georgian SSR were resettled to Abkhazia which changed its demographic makeup significantly. The publishing of materials in Abkhazian dwindled and was eventually stopped altogether; Abkhaz schools were closed in 1945–1946, requiring Abkhaz children to study in the Georgian language. This was part of the change in the general Soviet and
Stalinist nationalities policy towards national consolidation, carried out in all
Soviet republics to assimilate the ethnic minorities into
titular nationalities, which would in the end be assimilated into the "
Soviet people" under the lead of "elder brother"
Russians in the "pyramid of assimilation". The teaching of the Abkhaz language was preserved in the new reorganised Abkhaz schools as a mandatory subject by the decision of the Georgian Communist Party. The policy of repression was eased after Stalin's death and Beria's execution, and the Abkhaz were given a greater role in the governance of the republic. The Abkhazian ASSR was the only autonomous republic in the USSR in which the language of the titular nation (in that case Abkhaz) was confirmed in its constitution as one of its official languages. In the
post-war period, the Abkhazian ASSR was dominated by the ethnic Abkhazes, who occupied many more positions in the autonomous republic compared to Georgians. During the late Soviet period, ethnic Abkhazes occupied 41% of the seats in Abkhazian Supreme Soviet, and 67% of the republican ministers were ethnically Abkhaz. Moreover, they held even larger proportion of lower level official posts within the autonomous republic. The first secretary of the communist party in Abkhazia was also ethnically Abkhaz. All of this was despite the fact that Abkhazians made up only 17.8% of the region's population, while Georgians made up 45.7%, and other ethnicities (Greeks, Russians, Armenians, etc.) made up 36.5%.
Post-Soviet Georgia As the
Soviet Union began to disintegrate at the end of the 1980s, ethnic tensions grew between the Abkhaz and Georgians over Georgia's moves towards independence. Many Abkhaz opposed this, fearing that an independent Georgia would lead to the elimination of their autonomy, and argued instead for the establishment of Abkhazia as a separate Soviet republic in its own right. With the onset of
perestroika, the agenda of Abkhaz nationalists became more radical and exclusive. In 1988, they began to ask for the reinstatement of Abkhazia's former status of
Union Republic, as the submission of Abkhazia to another Union Republic was not considered to give enough guarantees of their development. The Georgian–Abkhaz
dispute turned violent on 16 July 1989 in Sukhumi. Numerous Georgians were killed or injured when they tried to enroll in a Georgian university instead of an Abkhaz one. After several days of violence, Soviet troops restored order in the city. In March 1990, Georgia
declared sovereignty, unilaterally nullifying treaties concluded by the Soviet government since 1921 and thereby moving closer to independence. The Republic of Georgia boycotted the 17 March 1991
all-Union referendum on the renewal of the Soviet Union called by Gorbachev; however, 52.3% of Abkhazia's population (almost all of the ethnic non-Georgian population) took part in the referendum and voted by an overwhelming majority (98.6%) to preserve the Union. Most ethnic non-Georgians in Abkhazia later boycotted a 31 March
referendum on Georgia's independence, which was supported by a huge majority of Georgian population. Within weeks, Georgia declared independence on 9 April 1991, under former Soviet dissident
Zviad Gamsakhurdia. Under Gamsakhurdia, the situation was relatively calm in Abkhazia and a power-sharing agreement was soon reached between the Abkhaz and Georgian factions, granting to the Abkhaz a certain over-representation in the local legislature. Under the compromise solution negotiated in August 1991, the Abkhaz received an ethnic quota of 28 seats in the Abkhazian Supreme Soviet, despite being only 18% of the population. The Georgians, making up 46% of the population, got 26 seats, while the rest received 11 seats. A
two-thirds majority was to be required to pass constitutional changes to ensure that key decisions would not be taken without approval from both Abkhaz and Georgian deputies and each side would hold veto power in principle. The
elections using this scheme were held in late 1991. Gamsakhurdia's rule was soon challenged by armed opposition groups, under the command of
Tengiz Kitovani, that forced him to flee the country in a
military coup in January 1992. Gamsakhurdia was replaced by former
Soviet Georgian leader and Soviet foreign minister
Eduard Shevardnadze, who became the country's head of state. Abkhazian Supreme Soviet Chairman
Vladislav Ardzinba used the
instability in Georgia after the overthrow of Gamsakhurdia to push for separation of Abkhazia from Georgia by cancelling Georgian laws in Abkhazia, placing all local enterprises and organizations, including military and police, under regional jurisdiction and creating a special regiment of internal troops under the command of the Presidium of the Abkhazian Supreme Soviet. On 21 February 1992, Georgia's ruling
military council announced that it was abolishing the Soviet-era constitution and restoring the 1921 Constitution of the
Democratic Republic of Georgia. Many Abkhaz interpreted this as an abolition of their autonomous status, although the 1921 constitution contained a provision for the region's autonomy. On 23 July 1992, the Abkhaz faction in the republic's Supreme Soviet declared effective independence from Georgia, although the session was boycotted by ethnic Georgian deputies and the gesture went unrecognised by any other country. The Abkhaz leadership launched a campaign of ousting Georgian officials from their offices, a process which was accompanied by violence. In the meantime, the Abkhaz leader Vladislav Ardzinba intensified his ties with hardline Russian politicians and military elite and declared he was ready for a war with Georgia. To respond to this situation, Eduard Shevardnadze, new leader of Georgia, interrupted his trip to Western Georgia, where he was touring cities still supporting ousted Gamsakhurdia and was being met by heckling. Shevardnadze announced that the decision of the Abkhaz faction was "absolutely unexpected" and that it was made without considering the opinion of the majority of population in Abkhazia.
War in Abkhazia and the
War in Abkhazia in August–October 1993 In August 1992,
war broke out when the
National Guard of Georgia, led by
Tengiz Kitovani entered in Abkhazia. The declared goal was to free Georgian officials held captive in Abkhazia, According to Darrell Slider, Abkhaz troops were the first to open fire. Abkhaz separatist government retreated to
Gudauta where the Russian military base was located. The Abkhaz were relatively unarmed at the time and the Georgian troops were able to march into the capital Sukhumi with relatively little resistance The Abkhaz military defeat was met with a hostile response by the self-styled
Confederation of Mountain Peoples of the Caucasus, an
umbrella group uniting a number of movements in the
North Caucasus, including elements of
Circassians,
Abazins,
Chechens,
Cossacks,
Ossetians and hundreds of volunteer paramilitaries and mercenaries from Russia, including the then-little-known
Shamil Basayev, later a leader of the anti-Moscow Chechen secessionists. They sided with the Abkhaz separatists to fight against the Georgian government. Russian military did not impede the crossing of the Russia-Georgia border by the North Caucasian militants into Abkhazia. On September 25, 1992,
Russian Supreme Council (parliament) passed a resolution which condemned Georgia, supported Abkhazia and called for the suspension of the delivery of any weapons and equipment to Georgia and the deployment of a Russian peacekeeping force in Abkhazia. It was sponsored by a
Russian nationalist politician
Sergei Baburin, a Russian deputy who met
Vladislav Ardzinba and argued that he was not that much sure that Abkhazia was part of Georgia. In October, the Abkhaz and North Caucasian paramilitaries mounted a major
offensive against Gagra after breaking a cease-fire, which drove the Georgian forces out of large swathes of the republic. Shevardnadze's government accused Russia of giving covert military support to the rebels with the aim of "detaching from Georgia its native territory and the Georgia-Russian frontier land". 1992 ended with the rebels in control of much of Abkhazia northwest of Sukhumi. The conflict was in stalemate until July 1993, when Abkhaz separatist militias launched an abortive attack on Georgian-held Sukhumi. They surrounded and heavily shelled the capital, where Shevardnadze was trapped. The warring sides
agreed to a Russian-brokered truce in Sochi at the end of July. But the ceasefire broke down again on 16 September 1993. Abkhaz forces, with armed support from outside Abkhazia, launched attacks on Sukhumi and Ochamchire. Notwithstanding UN Security Council's call for the immediate cessation of hostilities and its condemnation of the violation of the ceasefire by the Abkhaz side, fighting continued. After ten days of heavy fighting, Sukhumi was taken by Abkhazian forces on 27 September 1993. Shevardnadze narrowly escaped death, after vowing to stay in the city no matter what. He changed his mind, however, and decided to flee when separatist snipers fired on the hotel where he was staying. Abkhaz, North Caucasian militants, and their allies committed numerous atrocities During the war, gross human rights violations were reported on both sides. and murders "for the purpose of terrorising, robbing and driving the Abkhaz population out of their homes" in the first phase of the war (according to
Human Rights Watch).
Lisbon (1996) and
Istanbul (1999) have recognized
the ethnic cleansing of Georgians in Abkhazia in 1992-1993 by the Abkhaz forces and their allies. While both sides have committed atrocities, the Abkhaz side has been singled out as responsible for a deliberate displacement campaign "carried out as a military, strategic and political objective in its".
Ethnic cleansing of Georgians Before the
1992 War in Abkhazia, Georgians made up nearly half of Abkhazia's population, while less than one-fifth of the population was
Abkhaz. As the war progressed, confronted with hundreds of thousands of ethnic Georgians who were unwilling to leave their homes, the Abkhaz separatists implemented the process of
ethnic cleansing in order to expel and eliminate the Georgian ethnic population in Abkhazia. About 5,000 were killed, 400 went missing and up to 250,000 ethnic Georgians were expelled from their homes. According to
International Crisis Group, as of 2006 slightly over 200,000 Georgians remained displaced in Georgia proper. The campaign of ethnic cleansing also included Russians, Armenians, Greeks, moderate Abkhaz and other minor ethnic groups living in Abkhazia. More than 20,000 houses owned by ethnic Georgians were destroyed. Hundreds of schools, kindergartens, churches, hospitals, and historical monuments were pillaged and destroyed. Following the process of ethnic cleansing and mass expulsion, the population of Abkhazia was reduced from 525,000 in 1989 to 216,000 in 2012.
Pogroms against ethnic Georgians organised by Abkhaz leaders continued even after the end of war, as late as February 1995. Of about 250,000 Georgian refugees, some 60,000 subsequently returned to Abkhazia's
Gali District between 1994 and 1998, but tens of thousands were displaced again when fighting resumed in the Gali District in 1998. Nevertheless, between 40,000 and 60,000 refugees have returned to the Gali District since 1998, including persons commuting daily across the ceasefire line and those migrating seasonally in accordance with agricultural cycles. The human rights situation remained precarious for a while in the Georgian-populated areas of the Gali District. The United Nations and other international organisations have been fruitlessly urging the Abkhaz
de facto authorities "to refrain from adopting measures incompatible with the right to return and with international human rights standards, such as discriminatory legislation... [and] to cooperate in the establishment of a permanent international human rights office in Gali and to admit United Nations civilian police without further delay". Key officials of the Gali District are virtually all ethnic Abkhaz, though their support staff are ethnic Georgian. The ethnic Georgians in Gali are deprived of voting rights: during the 2021 local elections, only 900 eligible voters were registered in the Gali district, despite the 30,259 residents in the area. Posters of Russia's President
Vladimir Putin together with Khajimba, who, like Putin, had worked as a
KGB official, were everywhere in Sukhumi. Deputies of Russia's parliament and Russian singers, led by
Joseph Cobsohn, a State Duma deputy and a popular singer, came to Abkhazia, campaigning for Khajimba. However, Khajimba lost the elections to
Sergei Bagapsh. The tense situation in the republic led to the cancellation of the election results by the Supreme Court. After that, a deal was struck between former rivals to run jointly, with Bagapsh as a presidential candidate and Khajimba as a vice-presidential candidate. They received more than 90% of the votes in the new election. In July 2006, Georgian forces launched a successful police operation against the rebelled administrator of the Georgian-populated
Kodori Valley,
Emzar Kvitsiani. Kvitsiani had been appointed by the previous president of Georgia,
Eduard Shevardnadze, and refused to recognise the authority of president
Mikheil Saakashvili, who succeeded Shevardnadze after the
Rose Revolution. Although Kvitsiani escaped capture by Georgian police, the Kodori Gorge was brought back under the control of the central government in
Tbilisi. Sporadic acts of violence continued throughout the postwar years. Despite the peacekeeping status of the Russian peacekeepers in Abkhazia, Georgian officials routinely claimed that Russian peacekeepers were inciting violence by supplying Abkhaz rebels with arms and financial support. Russian support of Abkhazia became pronounced when the
Russian ruble became the
de facto currency and Russia began issuing passports to the population of Abkhazia. , Abkhazia in 2006 On 9 August 2008, Abkhazian forces fired on Georgian forces in
Kodori Gorge. This coincided with the
2008 South Ossetia war where Russia decided to support the Ossetian separatists who had been attacked by Georgia after Russia provoked Georgia. The conflict escalated into a full-scale war between the Russian Federation and the Republic of Georgia. On 10 August 2008, an estimated 9,000 Russian soldiers entered Abkhazia ostensibly to reinforce the Russian peacekeepers in the republic. About 1,000 Abkhazian soldiers moved to expel the residual Georgian forces within Abkhazia in the Upper Kodori Gorge. By 12 August the Georgian forces and civilians had evacuated the last part of Abkhazia under Georgian government control. Russia recognised the
independence of Abkhazia on 26 August 2008. This was followed by the annulment of the 1994 ceasefire agreement and the termination of
UN and
OSCE monitoring missions. On 28 August 2008, the
Parliament of Georgia passed a resolution declaring Abkhazia a Russian-occupied territory. Since independence was recognised by Russia, a series of controversial agreements were made between the Abkhazian government and the Russian Federation that leased or sold a number of key state assets and relinquished control over the borders. In May 2009 several opposition parties and war veteran groups protested against these deals complaining that they undermined state sovereignty and risked "exchanging one colonial power [Georgia] for another [Russia]". The vice-president, Raul Khajimba, resigned on 28 May saying he agreed with the criticism the opposition had made. Subsequently, a conference of opposition parties nominated Raul Khajimba as their candidate in the December 2009
Abkhazian presidential election won by
Sergei Bagapsh.
Political developments since 2014 In the spring of 2014, the opposition submitted an ultimatum to President
Aleksandr Ankvab to dismiss the government and make radical reforms. On 27 May 2014, in the centre of
Sukhumi, 10,000 supporters of the Abkhaz opposition gathered for a mass demonstration. On the same day, Ankvab's headquarters in Sukhumi was stormed by opposition groups led by
Raul Khajimba, forcing him into flight to
Gudauta. The opposition claimed that the protests were sparked by poverty, but the main point of contention was President Ankvab's liberal policy towards ethnic Georgians in the
Gali region. The opposition said these policies could endanger Abkhazia's ethnic Abkhazian identity. Raul Khajimba was later
elected president, taking office in September 2014. In November 2014, Vladimir Putin moved to formalise the Abkhazian military's relationship as part of the Russian armed forces, signing a treaty with Khajimba. The Georgian government denounced the agreement as "a step towards annexation". Khajimba was re-elected with a margin of less than 2% in 2019. In January 2020 the Abkhazian Supreme Court annulled the results, following protests against Khajimba. Khajimba resigned the presidency on 12 January, and new elections were called for 22 March.
Aslan Bzhania was elected in the subsequent elections with around 59% of the vote. In December 2021, there was
unrest.
Protests took place in November 2024 after the arrest of five opposition activists who opposed an investment agreement with
Russia, which led to the resignation of then–President
Aslan Bzhania and a new presidential election in February 2025. Acting president
Badra Gunba was elected, receiving 56% of the vote. ==Geography==