Unfortunately, Gamsakhurdia's commitment to democracy and rule of law was not as strong as his romantic Georgian nationalism, which encouraged chauvinist and intolerant tendencies among his fellow Georgians. Not only did he favor ethnic-Georgian dominance in a population composed of nearly one-third non-Georgians, he dreamed of Georgia as a regional great power, a kind of Caucasian fulcrum between Russia, Turkey and Iran.
shows how Gamsakhurdia favored the Georgian race and encouraged discrimination
Tensions increased with all the country's minorities (including Armenians, Mengrelians and Azeris), but with real ferocity in Abkhazia and South Ossetia. There had been serious interethnic violence in both regions starting in 1989, which led to South Ossetia's secession in 1990.
Gamsakhurdia was deposed in early 1992 in favor of an unelected Shevardnadze.
Gamsakhurdia went into exile but repeatedly tried to return to power. In response, Shevardnadze sent forces into Abkhazia in September 1992 to root out support for his rival, leading to the brutal Georgian-Abkhaz war of the following year
So the need to get rid of this guy leads to a "brutal" war. sounds like a bad outcome
Although ignored in the West, the first instances of what later was called "ethnic cleansing" did not take place in Yugoslavia, but in South Ossetia and Abkhazia, and were perpetrated by radical Georgian nationalists under the slogan "Georgia for the Georgians.
This is the best resource I have found so far with respect to nationalism in Georgia. It has more info with less clutter than anything I have come across so far.
Many observers believed that with patience, time and wisdom, Tbilisi might have
restored its authority in South Ossetia by peaceful means. Now we shall never
know. President Saakashvili's almost-inexplicable decision to unleash a massive
artillery bombardment of Ossetian civilians and then attempt a swift reconquest
of the region has permanently altered the political landscape.
The key period for both South Ossetia and Abkhazia was during the Soviet
breakup and subsequent emergence of an independent Georgia under the leadership
of an extreme romantic nationalist, Zviad Gamsakhurdia.
Gamsakhurdia was a distinguished Georgian writer and a noteworthy anti-Soviet
dissident. A genuine human-rights figure, he was imprisoned by then-Georgian
Communist Party boss Eduard Shevardnadze. Gamsakhurdia led nationalist forces in
a drive for independence during the Gorbachev years. He became
Georgian-parliament chairman in 1990 and was overwhelmingly elected president in
May 1991, before the Soviet collapse.
this says a lot about some reasons for revs and nationalism
In seven decades as part of the Soviet Union, Georgia maintained some
cultural independence, and Georgian nationalism remained a
significant--though at times muted--issue in relations with the
Russians.
The root cause has to do with impunity, because for many years, these police was used to control the population, mainly, and not to prosecute criminals. Therefore, in order for them to be the blind instruments of power, they were given autonomy. They were given impunity.
The judicial police, though, are not only rogues acting on their own. The force is also frequently used by politicians from the ruling party to intimidate opponents
The corruption is not fought, instead, it is encouraged and used by the politicians
In June, when drug baron Hector Palma crash landed in a Lear jet, the government had to use the army to capture him. Judicial police in the drug lord's pay had whisked him away to a safe house belonging to the regional judicial police commander. Experts here estimate that Palma, who often traveled wearing a judicial police uniform, and other drug kingpins, have been paying judicial police and other authorities as much as $200 million a month for protection.