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The embattled leader of Georgia’s Moscow-backed separatist region of Abkhazia, Aslan Bzhania, was quoted as saying on November 16 that “legitimate authorities” control all of Abkhazia except the parliamentary complex that opposition protesters wrested control of a day earlier to block a controversial Russia-related vote.

The opposition has since demanded Bzhania’s and other senior officials’ resignations and new elections.

Bzhania’s press service said he held an urgent meeting with his cabinet at a school in his home village of Tamysh to discuss “ways to stabilize the situation that arose.”

Bzhania had previously said he was “ready” to step down if opposition supporters agreed to leave the parliament compound in the capital, Sukhumi.

There were fears of escalating violence amid the storming of the parliament, which followed weeks of tensions, in a region whose independence Moscow has backed since a five-day war against Georgian forces in 2008 over another breakaway Georgian province, South Ossetia.

WATCH: The leader of the Moscow-backed Abkhazia region said on November 16 that he would step down if protesters leave the parliament compound. A day earlier, demonstrators against an investment agreement with Moscow stormed the parliament in Sukhumi, the administrative center of the Georgian breakaway territory.

Opposition leaders have demanded not only the permanent abandonment of a proposed deal with Russia that opponents say would unfairly open the property market to wealthy Russians, but also Bzhania’s resignation and those of his vice president and the breakaway leadership’s prime minister.

“The situation will be stabilized. We will return everything to the legal framework,” Bzhania’s press service quoted him as saying on November 16.

He reportedly added that “the entire country” — which is overwhelmingly regarded as Georgian territory internationally — “is controlled by the legitimate authorities, with the exception of the complex of buildings they have occupied.”

Tamysh is about 40 kilometers from the region’s capital.

The opposition called for a fresh rally on November 16 after protesters the previous day stormed the parliament grounds over a real estate deal with Moscow and demanded Bzhania’s ouster.

“Those who seized the buildings, those who tried to commit a coup d’etat, must vacate the compound, after which I am ready to call elections, ready to resign, and run in fresh elections,” Bzhania said from Tamysh.

However, the opposition appeared determined to ignore Bzhania’s demands.

“Aslan Bzhania is resorting to desperate attempts to preserve his government,” a so-called Coordination Council of the opposition said in a statement, adding, “His reign is over.”

The statement accused Bzhania of “enriching his relatives and a narrow circle close to him.”

Local media said lawmakers had on November 15 failed to ratify the deal, which opponents fear would allow wealthy Russians to acquire property in the picturesque Black Sea region, pushing real estate prices higher and making it unaffordable for locals.

Bzhania, a former chief of Abkhazia’s state security service, told his supporters on November 16 that “enormous pressure is being exerted on members of parliament so that the parliament makes an unlawful decision to dismiss the president.” But he warned that the “2014 scenario will not be repeated,” an allusion to one of two instances when Abkhaz leaders resigned due to opposition protests.

On June 1, 2014, Abkhaz leader Aleksander Ankvab resigned following opposition protests led by Raul Khajimba, who took his place, only to resign, too, after the Supreme Court overturned the results of the 2019 presidential election. Bzhania then became president after winning a March 2020 vote.

Abkhazia and South Ossetia broke away from Georgia’s rule after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.

Moscow recognized the independence of the two regions after Russian forces repelled a Georgian attempt to retake South Ossetia in a five-day war in 2008 that ended with Georgia’s defeat.

Most countries still recognize Abkhazia as part of Georgia, but its economy is almost entirely dependent on Moscow, which pays the salaries of public administrators as well as social payments to residents.

Georgian pro-European President Salome Zurabishvili responded to the tensions in what Tbilisi regards as its occupied region by accusing Russia of “taking accelerated steps toward annexation” of Abkhazia.

Tensions have been running high in the region in recent weeks, with opposition activists demanding an end to Russia’s dominance over the region and its economy, though opposition parties on November 15 said their protest is not against Russia.

“The actions of the protesters are not directed against relations between Russia and Abkhazia,” they said in a joint statement. “In fact, we, the opposition, have always emphasized the importance of fraternal and strategic ties between our countries.”

Russia’s Foreign Ministry accused the Abkhaz opposition of exceeding legal means and “provoking an escalation.” It said through a spokeswoman that Russia was not interfering and expected the situation “will be resolved exclusively by peaceful political means.”

Moscow recommended that any Russian citizens in Abkhazia leave “if possible” and that others refrain from traveling there.

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