Sukhumi

The Kremlin does not need Bzhania - Inal Khashig expands on this view in his column, which we present here in an abridged version.
Russia is trying to stabilise the situation in Abkhazia by removing figures who irritate the opposition from power.
The review of dialogue and conflict transformation initiatives in the Georgian Abkhaz and Georgian-South Ossetian contexts.
Abkhazia’s new president, Badra Gunba, took the oath of office in the presence of parliament members and Constitutional Court judges.
A new term has emerged in Russian political vocabulary regarding the conflicts of the 1990s—Georgian "neo-Nazis." Why does Moscow need this?
Ekho Kavkaza reflects on the inclusion of Abkhaz journalists in the Russian Ministry of Justice's registry of foreign agents.
Tengiz Dzhopua believes that the reason for the emergence of anti-Russian sentiments in Abkhazia may ultimately be Russia’s own policies.
Like many in Abkhazia’s civil society, well-known Abkhazian lawyer Said Gezerdava believes that the local authorities themselves initiated the repression against journalists critical of them.