Why and how were visas introduced
Many associate the deterioration of relations between Tbilisi and Moscow with Georgia’s third President Mikheil Saakashvili. However, he had nothing to do with the introduction of visas: it all started back during the First Chechen War — back then, Russia was ruled by Boris Yeltsin and Georgia by Eduard Shevardnadze.
After the USSR had collapsed, Georgia became the first country (excluding the Baltic states) that Russia introduced visas for. And even though by that point Russia had managed to corner Georgia into being part of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), an organisation made up of former Soviet republics, the relationship between Tbilisi and Moscow was deteriorating rapidly.
At the beginning, Shevardnadze, former head of the USSR Foreign Ministry, supported Russia in the First Chechen War. The support amounted to Georgia letting Russian border officers join the Georgian ones in guarding the Chechen part of Georgia’s border, located high in the Caucasus Mountains, near the Shatili village, from 1994 to 1998.
Hundreds of Chechen citizens — children, women, as well as men who were part of the resistance — fled the war using mountain paths, trying to find refuge in Georgia’s Pankisi Gorge. Pankisi is full of Chechen residents whose ancestors moved there in the 19th century. In Russia, Pankisi was referred to as a “hotbed of terrorism”, with Russian aviation even bombing the gorge at one point.