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After a temporary occupation by Turkish and British troops in 1918–1920, Ajaria was reunited with Georgia in 1920. After a brief military conflict in March 1921, Ankara government ceded the territory to Georgia due to Article VI of Treaty of Kars on grounds that autonomy is provided for the Muslim population. The Soviet Union established the Adzharian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic in 1921 in accord with this clause. Thus, Adjara was still a component part of Georgia, but with considerable local autonomy. Its Muslim population was repressed by Stalin.
After the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, Ajaria became part of a newly independent but politically divided Republic of Georgia. It avoided being dragged into the chaos and civil war that afflicted the rest of the country between 1991–1993 due largely to the authoritarian rule of its leader Aslan Abashidze. Although he successfully maintained order in Adjara and made it one of the country's most prosperous regions, he was accused of involvement in organised crime – notably large-scale smuggling to fund his government and enrich himself personally – as well as human rights violations. The central government in Tbilisi had very little say in what went on in Adjara; during the presidency of Eduard Shevardnadze, it seemed convenient to turn a blind eye to events in Adjara.
This changed following the Rose Revolution of 2003 when Shevardnadze was deposed in favour of the reformist opposition leader Mikheil Saakashvili, who pledged to crack down on separatism within Georgia. In the spring of 2004, a major crisis in Ajaria erupted as the central government sought to reimpose its authority on the region. It threatened to develop into an armed confrontation. However, Saakashvili's ultimatums and mass protests against Abashidze's autocratic rule forced the Adjaran leader to resign in May 2004, following which he went into exile in Russia. After Abashidze's ouster, a new law was introduced to redefine the terms of Ajaria's autonomy – a measure which some have criticised as an effective elimination of most of the region's autonomous powers.
In violation of promises made at the 1999 Istanbul OSCE conference, Russia continued to maintain a military base in Batumi. This was a source of great tension with Georgia, which has threatened to block access to the facility. Following talks in March 2005, the Russian government proposed to begin the process of withdrawal later the same year. In late July, the Russian hardware began to leave the base in Batumi.
Adjara is subdivided into six administrative units:
The regional capital, Batumi is an important gateway for the shipment of goods heading into Georgia, Azerbaijan and landlocked Armenia. The port of Batumi is used for the shipment of oil from Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan. Its oil refinery handles Caspian oil from Azerbaijan which arrives by pipeline to Supsa port and is transported from there to Batumi by rail. The Ajarian capital is a centre for shipbuilding and manufacturing.
Adjara is the main center of Georgia's coastal tourism industry, having displaced the northwestern province of Abkhazia since that region's de facto secession from Georgia in 1993.
According to the 2002 census, the population of Adjara is 376.016. The Adjarians (Ajars) are ethnographic group of Georgian people who speak a local dialect of the Georgian language. The written language is Georgian.
The Georgian population of Adjara had been generally known as "Muslim Georgians" until the 1926 Soviet census which listed them as "Ajars" and counted 71,000 of them. Later, they were simply classified under a broader category of Georgians as no official Soviet census asked about religion.
Ethnic minorities include Russians, Armenians, Greeks, Abkhaz, etc.
The collapse of the Soviet Union and the re-establishment of Georgian independence accelerated the Christianization, especially among the young,George Sanikidze and Edward W. Walker (2004), Islam and Islamic Practices in Georgia. Berkeley Program in Soviet and Post-Soviet Studies. University of California, Berkeley Institute of Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies. a process allegedly encouraged by the governmental officials. However, significant number of Ajarians remain Sunni Muslims. It is said that at the moment of Georgia's declaration of independence (1991), the number of Adjarian Muslims accounted for 70% though the data remain unverifiable as no Soviet statistics included the information on various religious segments. According to estimates recently published by the Department of Statistics of Adjara, 63% are Georgian Orthodox Christians, and 30% Muslim,Autonomous Republic of Adjara, Department of Statistics while according to the BBC, "nowadays about half the population professes the Islamic faith".http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/country_profiles/3520322.stm#facts The remaining are Armenian Christians (0.8%), Roman Catholics (0.2%), and others (6%). Interestingly, there now is only one mosque in the regional capital city of Batumi, whereas there are 14 Christian churches. Furthermore, some sources claim it is not allowed to perform Adhan at the Batumi mosque.http://www.yenisafak.com.tr/arsiv/2004/MAYIS/21/d09.html
Ajaria | Former countries in Europe | Caucasus | Historic provinces of Georgia | Regions of Georgia
Аджария | Adjària | Adjarien | Adscharien | Adžaaria | Adjaria | Aĝario | Adjarie | 아자리야 공화국 | Ajaria | Ajaria | אג'ריה | აჭარის ავტონომიური რესპუბლიკა | Adžarija | Adzjarië | アジャリア自治共和国 | Adżaria | Adžaria | Adzjarien | Acaristan