Bidzina Ivanishvili, Sept. 12, 2012. (Shakh Aivazov/AP)
For a long time, it looked like Ivanishvili, whose fortune of more than
$6 billion is larger than his country’s budget, was on nobody’s side but
his own. In his extravagant glass fortress of a house, Georgia’s
richest and most influential man talked to The Daily Beast recently
about his priority to “untangle the most complicated political knots
left by the previous power.” The new Georgian leader is famous for being
a recluse and making unpredictable statements and strange decisions; he
gave out cars for free to men from his home village and has doled out
more than $100 million in annual charitable contributions for a decade,
as a one-man welfare state. All his life, Ivanishvili admitted, he
“deeply disliked politics.” It was his wife and his oldest son who
convinced him to stay in Georgia when he was about to move to France, a
year ago. Shortly after that, he announced that he would lead an
opposition party, called Georgian Dream. Today, 80 percent of Georgians
say they like the billionaire and 55 percent of the population voted for
his party, just as Georgia shifted to a parliamentary system where the
prime minister will govern. Suddenly he was Georgia’s leader.
“I did not leave Georgia only
because I could not allow one man, who did not love it, to run this
country,” Ivanishvili said of President Mikheil Saakashvili, whom he
disparages openly as “a talented liar” for spoiling relations with
Russia, once the biggest importer of Georgian goods. Ivanishvili’s
stated strategic priorities remain joining the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization and European Union—both mostly theoretical prospects
today—as well as making peace with Russia.
Ivanishvili
begins his days with yoga at 5 a.m., which is extraordinarily early for
late-sleeping Georgians. Similar to Russia’s Prime Minister Medvedev
(who recently promoted strict anti-smoking legislation), Ivanishvili is a
fan of a healthy, tobacco- and drug-free life, he says. The billionaire
runs the country from his glass palace designed by Japanese architect
Shin Takamatsu; it’s decorated with more than $1 billion worth of art
that includes paintings by Lucian Freud and Roy Lichtenstein. The
private complex is located in the heart of Tbilisi's botanical garden,
where the sporty prime minister likes to take long walks. “Though I can
see how it annoys and scares Saakashvili and his friends, I will
constantly make steps to improve our relations with Russia,” Ivanishvili
promised. “Restoration of friendship with Russia, our biggest neighbor,
is necessary for our peace and economy.”
Georgia’s
top two politicians are at odds these days. The winners from Georgian
Dream blame the defeated president (who will remain in office until next
fall) and his closest circle for stealing millions of state dollars and
for locking hundreds of political opponents in prisons. Thousands of
protesters come out every day to Saakashvili’s residence and city
squares to demand the president’s resignation. In the meantime,
Saakashvili addressed the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of
Europe to accuse Ivanishvili’s government of “selective justice” and
efforts to “silence political opposition.”
Last
October, Ivanishvili and his party won in fair and transparent
democratic elections. But to succeed, the new government has to solve
the country’s looming challenge of unemployment, which in many regions
reaches a staggering 70 percent. “The economic situation in many rural
areas is acute, with many villages half-empty, and many locals engaged
mostly in subsistence or small-scale farming,” said Lawrence Sheets of
the International Crisis Group.
The new Georgian leader is famous for being a recluse and making
unpredictable statements and strange decisions; he gave out cars for
free to men from his home village and has doled out omore than $100
million in annual charitable contributions for a decade.
Even
Ivanishvili’s home village Chorvila, where the billionaire renovated
every house and for years supported the sick and large families, looks
sad these days. A few pedestrians gathered outside a small bakery
earlier this week, looking drunk and lost. Most men have nothing else to
do besides walking their cows along dirty streets. “Only 5 percent of
our people have jobs at Ivanishvili’s private property or at
construction,” the village administrator, Vebkhe Ivanishvili, a distant
relative, explained. At least lucky Chorvila’s inhabitants received
bonuses from medical services at the hospital built by Ivanishvili. The
prime minister pays $3,000 for every wedding and $2,000 for funerals in
the village. Like his charity throughout Georgia, the contributions
bought loyalty but not prosperity. One of his neighbors, Niko
Mchetkishvili, 58, said the last job he had was at a collective farm
back 1990s. He expressed his great hopes that Russia and Georgia would
make peace: “Every Georgian family misses relatives in Russia and every
Georgian soul hopes Ivanishvili will solve the problem with separatist
Ossetia and Abkhazia republics.”
The
new prime minister expressed a strong interest in reviving agriculture,
and the government had created three investment funds. “We’ll provide
help with 75 percent of investments to anybody who has a plan to come
and develop our economy by investing 25 percent,” Ivanishvili told The
Daily Beast. The new state’s rural development fund, worth about $606
million, is promising to give low-interest loans to farmers and
supposedly turn Georgia into an organic paradise full of tasty
vegetables and fruit.
Georgian
Dream supporters say that if Ivanishvili has managed to make billions
of dollars in Russian business in the 1990s, and sell his businesses for
almost $1 billion last year (a deal Russia’s leaders almost certainly
had to approve), he should manage to improve life and reintegrate broken
pieces of Georgia. Grumpy skeptics say that without a deal with Russian
president Vladimir Putin, Ivanishvili will not achieve any progress in
his agenda and the centerpiece of his economic plan—reviving
agriculture—will lack a market.
In
the last four years since the war in 2008, Russian federal security
forces built massive bases on former Georgian territories. Abkhazia,
recognized as an independent state by Russia and several more countries,
showed no signs of welcoming Georgia back, but that did not seem to be a
problem for Ivanishvili: last week he pledged to seek the restoration
of the Abkhazia railroad that would transport Georgians and their produce
to Moscow, through the separatist region. He admitted that many asked
him how he could possibly think of making Georgia a NATO country and
stay friendly with the Kremlin: “I analyze and I understand that in
Russia they do not really like NATO and that they are trying to
strengthen their positions. But I hope we’ll manage to explain our
interests to Russia,” Ivanishvili said, before his first meeting with
the Kremlin officials in Davos.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/01/26/georgia-s-bold-peacenik-prime-minister-ivanishvili.html
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