1994 South Ossetian parliamentary election explained

Country:South Ossetia
Previous Election:1990
Next Election:1999
Election Date:March 1994
Seats For Election:36 seats in the Parliament
Majority Seats:19
First Election:yes
Party1:Communist Party of South Ossetia
Leader1:Stanislav Kochiev
Percentage1:47.2
Seats1:19
Party2:Independents
Leader2:Gerasim Khugayev
Percentage2:52.8
Seats2:17
Prime Minister
Before Election:Gerasim Khugayev
Before Party:Independent politician
After Election:Feliks Zassiev
After Party:Independent politician

Parliamentary elections were held in South Ossetia in March 1994. They were the first and only elections to the State Nykhas, the legislature of the partially recognized South Caucasian territory which most of the United Nations recognised as part of Georgia under illegal occupation by Russian forces. The elections were the first since the South Ossetian war from 1991 to 1992.

Background

South Ossetia in the 1990s has been described by pundits and journalists as a "land forgotten by time" clinging to the Soviet Union and the practice of communism despite the wider region abandoning the political system. Since South Ossetia's de facto independence in 1991 during the South Ossetia War the dominant political party was the Communist Party of South Ossetia which supported a staunch preservation of the Soviet way of life. The other political faction consisted of independent members of the South Ossetian Supreme Soviet who abandoned the Communist Party to focus on domestic issues and Ossetian nationalism.[1]

In September 1993 Ludvig Chibirov, a colleague of North Ossetian leader Akhsarbek Galazov, was elected head of state. The initial constitution of South Ossetia did not have a formal head of state position, with the head of state instead being the Chairman of the South Ossetian Supreme Soviet. Chibirov, an independent, changed the name of the Supreme Soviet to the State Nykhas (Council of Elders), with the first elections to the newly renamed body being held in March 1994.

Results

The elections saw the Communist Party win 19 of the 36 seats with 47.2% of the vote, with the remaining seats being won by independents.

Aftermath

Despite Chibirov's independents not securing a majority, he would be re-elected to his Chairmanship and one of his first actions was welcoming the Georgian-Russian peacekeeping force, the Joint Peacekeeping Force (JPKF) to occupy South Ossetia.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Zverev . Alexei . CONTESTED BORDERS IN THE CAUCASUS . poli.vub.ac.be . 11 February 2024.
  2. Web site: 38. Georgia/South Ossetia (1990-present) . uca.edu . 11 February 2024.