By Neil Hauer in Mejvriskhevi Last weekend, a great drama played out in Georgia’s capital, Tbilisi, as voters headed to the polls in an election widely seen as determining the country’s future. But for the village of Mejvriskhevi, just 50 kilometres northwest of the capital, it might as well have taken place on another planet. Mejvriskhevi lies along what’s known as the Administrative Boundary Line (ABL) that separates the two sides of one of the Caucasus’ longest-running conflicts: that between Georgia and South Ossetia. As the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, long-running tensions between eth…