The Eurasian Triangle. Russia, the Caucasus and Japan, 1904-1945

(WallPaper) #1

The Akashi Operations Ë 23


Fig. 2.6.Giorgi Dekanozishvili (in a mining engineer’s uniform) with his parents and sister, Tiflis,
end of the nineteenth century.


ary Party, the Armenian Dashnaktsutyun Party, and the Latvian Social Democratic


Party. The Bolsheviks and Mensheviks, concerned about the funding by Japan, did


not participate. Although unication of these diverse groups (socialist and nonsocial-


ist) proved impossible, the conference did issue a declaration advocating the over-


throw of autocracy, the establishment of a free, democratic system, and the right of


self-determination for all nations in the Russian Empire. Soon after the conference,


the Georgian Socialist Federalist Party issued in Paris a leaet in the name of itself, the


Socialist Revolutionary Party, the Polish Socialist Party, and the Latvian Social Demo-


cratic Party. Written in the Georgian language for Georgian workers, it advocated the


right to free choice, territorial autonomy, and secession for all nations in the Russian


Empire.²⁷


With Tokyo’s strong support in sight, Akashi and Zillicaus convened another con-


ference in Geneva, Switzerland, in early April 1905, in which the Russian Socialist Rev-


olutionaries and Father Gapon took the initiative in inviting mainly socialist and rev-


olutionary parties. This time the Belarusian Hramada, the Bolsheviks (represented by


Lenin), the Bund, and the Armenian Social Democratic Workers’ Party also joined in


27 Fonds Georges Dekanozichvili. Centre historique des archives nationales (CHAN), Paris, boxe
345AP/1.

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