The only important difference here between Slovenia and Kosovo is that the rights of the former were recognised quickly by the international community while those of the latter were not. For purely pragmatic political reasons, Western governments continued to treat Kosovo as if it were just part of the so-called federal republic set up by Serbia and Montenegro after the break-up of Yugoslavia. And again, for pragmatic reasons, they drifted into the position of treating Kosovo as merely an internal part of Serbia - in theory, though not in practice - after the summer of 2006. But the underlying justification of Kosovo's claim to independence remains, and cannot be overturned merely because Western governments made a mistaken interpretation of the facts. Those countries that still deny recognition to Kosovo are only prolonging that mistake.
How, then, does this precedent apply to South Ossetia and Abkhazia? The short answer is that it does not. In the Communist period, Abkhazia was an "autonomous republic" within Georgia, with some special rights of self--government; South Ossetia had a lower status, as an "autonomous province". But Georgia as a whole was not, and is not, a federation; and it is certainly not a federation that has undergone dissolution. The Soviet Union did dissolve, but Abkhazia and South Ossetia had not been operating directly as units of the Soviet federal system. There is nothing here equivalent to the emergence of Kosovo from the dissolution of the former Yugoslavia.
Possibly, a case could be made for Abkhazia's having had a right to independence on the basis of three little-known laws passed under Gorbachev in April 1990. These laws said that the "autonomous republics" within the member states of the Soviet Union had the same rights of self--determination as the member states themselves. So it could be claimed that, during the short period in which the USSR continued to exist, the "autonomous republics" also had the right to seek independence. This right existed, however, only within the (very recent) constitutional law of the Soviet Union, and would have no force once that union had dissolved - a dissolution that did in fact take place before the Abkhaz declaration of independence.
- Licence To Chill? Not Yet, Prime Minister
- Money Can't Buy Us Love: Profiting From Loneliness
- More Immigration Means Less Integration
- Is France As Doomed As Houellebecq Thinks?
- Compassion To Refugees, Not Capitulation To Islamic State
- How Mervyn King Got Northern Rock Wrong
- Fix Rotten Boroughs Or Risk Voting Wars
- Migrant Crisis? Europe Hasn't Seen Anything Yet
- Why Palmyra Should Matter To The West
- Corbyn's Rise Makes Cameron Redundant
- No, Jeremy: Politics Is All About Borders Now
- Why 'Lady Chatterley' Still Provokes Us
- For Climate Alarmism, The Poor Pay The Price
- Will Putin's Empire Outlast The Soviets?
- British Witnesses To Lenin's Revolution
- Bibliophiles Beware: Online Prices Are A Lottery
- How Jeremy Corbyn's Coup Hijacked Labour
- Corbyn's Signpost Back To The Ghetto
- Unionists, Don't Despair: Scotland Is Not Lost — Yet
- Britain's Apologists For Child Abuse


















1:10 PM
9:10 AM
12:09 AM
2:09 AM