During the Soviet-era, the Abkhaz ASSR was divided into six raions (districts) named after their respective capitals.
The administrative divisions of the disputed Republic of Abkhazia have stayed the same, with one exception: in 1995, Tkvarcheli District was created around the town of Tkvarcheli from parts of the Ochamchira and Gali districts.
The Georgian government, which claims Abkhazia as an autonomous republic but lacks control, has not changed the subdivisions from the Soviet-era.
Districts of Abkhazia
editDistricts are led by the Head of the Administration, who is simultaneously Mayor of the District's capital, except in the case of Sukhumi. The Head of the Administration is appointed by the President following consultations with the District Assembly. Previously, the Head was appointed from among the District Assembly members, but without consultations, but in practice the President would often appoint an acting Head from without who was subsequently elected to the assembly. The current procedure was adopted by the People's Assembly of Abkhazia on 29 January 2016, over competing proposals to elect the Head directly by the District's population or by Assembly members, and after voting almost unanimously not to change the previous procedure on 30 July 2015.[1][2]
- (1) Gagra
- (2) Gudauta
- (3) Sukhumi
- (4) Gulripshi
- (5) Ochamchira
- (6) Tkvarcheli
- (7) Gali
Towns of Abkhazia
edit- Gagra
- Gali
- Gudauta
- New Athos
- Ochamchire
- Pitsunda (since 2007)[3]
- Sukhumi
- Tkvarcheli
Urban settlements of Abkhazia
editHistoric regions of Abkhazia
editAbkhazia has traditionally been divided into several historical regions[4] (they roughly correspond to modern districts that are given in parentheses):
- Sadzen (Gagra district and Sochi region which is now in Russia)
- Bzyb (Gudauta district)
- Gumaa (Sukhumi district)
- Abzhywa (Ochamchira and partly Tkvarcheli districts)
- Samurzakano (Gali and partly Tkvarcheli district)
- Dal-Tsabal (Gulripshi district)
These are the regions mentioned in the Abkhazian Constitution of 1994.[5][6] According to the popular (but erroneous[7]) belief that the seven stripes of the Abkhazian flag correspond to the seven historical regions of the country, the seventh one represents Pskhu-Aibga.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Sharia, Vitali (29 January 2016). "Против выборности и абортов". Echo of the Caucasus. Retrieved 6 February 2016.
- ^ Zavodskaia, Elena (30 July 2015). "Мажоритарная система осталась в силе". Echo of the Caucasus. Retrieved 19 October 2015.
- ^ Lenta.ru, Абхазский курорт Пицунда превратился в город (Abkhazian resort Pitsunda became a city), 10 February 2007
- ^ Археогия и этнография Абхазии, http://kolhida.ru Archived 2007-06-25 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Constitution_of_Abkhazia (in English)
- ^ President of Abkhazia official site, Конституция Республики Абхазия Archived 2012-01-19 at the Wayback Machine (in Russian)
- ^ Аргун Ю.Г. (Argun Yu. G.), О Государственном флаге Archived 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine (On the state flag (XLVIII итоговая научная сессия (11-13 мая). тезисы докладов. - Сухум: АбИГИ, 2004, с. 3-4)