A charismatic president and a billionaire prime minister fight for the country’s soul.
Once upon a time, the presidential palace perched on a hill overlooking
the Georgian capital, Tbilisi, was bathed in light and its gilded halls
hummed with activity as President Mikheil Saakashvili worked on his
pro-Western reform plans.
But
last year’s election, which elevated Saakashvili’s rival, the
pro-Russian billionaire Bidzina Ivanishvili, to the post of prime
minister, shut off that light. (The new government argued that exterior
lighting of the palace was too expensive.) And Misha, as the burly, once
ebullient Saakashvili is known, now toils in darkness, his famous smile
having long since been replaced by gloom.
The
shenanigans of his enemies, he says, “do not stop surprising me.” The
president, who was swept to power after the 2003 Rose Revolution,
claiming an impressive 97 percent of the vote, is decidedly less popular
these days. In recent weeks, protesters have gathered outside his
residence, demanding he step down before his term is up in October. And
his once remarkable approval rating now hovers, abysmally, around 29
percent, according to the National Democratic Institute.
Saakashvili
insists that in the last few months, under the new government, economic
growth has fallen from 6 percent to zero. It is clear: everything he
has worked for, his opponents will turn to naught. “Georgia used to be
an example of the best reforms,” says Saakashvili. “And now we
demonstrate how fast we can destroy them.” Before becoming president,
Saakashvili traveled and lived in the West, marrying a Dutch woman and
studying law at Columbia University in New York. Upon his return to
Georgia, he took a job in the administration of Eduard Shevardnadze; he
later quit and led the peaceful revolution that brought down
Shevardnadze’s government and ushered in a period of Western-style
reforms. Georgian troops fought alongside American soldiers in Iraq, and
the nation applied for NATO and European Union membership.
Since
taking office in November, the new Georgian government has battled
openly with the president, initiating more than 100 criminal
investigations of Saakashvili allies on suspicion of fraud and
corruption. Former interior minister Vano Merabishvili complains that he
is being harassed by authorities. “The police are questioning every
single one of my friends and relatives.” And Nika Gvaramia, the former
minister of justice and education who stands accused of money
laundering, says his case is “purely political” and vows to face the
court “without fear.”
The
current minister of interior affairs, Irakli Gharibashvili, is adamant
that the government can stand up its case. “We suspect the top elite
stole millions of dollars. You will hear some evidence soon that will
surprise you,” he says.
At
the same time, the government has released almost 200 people, whom they
identified as political prisoners, and plans to free almost 6,000 more,
who, according to the Interior Ministry, have been kept in “horrifying
conditions.”
“Saakashvili
created a gulag in Georgia—almost every family had relatives in jail,”
Defense Minister Irakli Alasania says. “Authorities taped phone
conversations of all important public figures, including foreign
correspondents visiting the country.”
The
majority of the prisoners had been arrested for minor crimes, and the
current amnesty has been praised by international human-rights groups.
Not surprisingly, Saakashvili rejects the government’s claims, arguing
that the inmates were spies and professional rebels, “a threat to state
security,” and “connected to Russian elements.”
Russia,
the big neighbor to the north, casts a long shadow. And the rivalry
between the incoming prime minister and the outgoing president can be
seen as a battle for the soul of the republic: will Georgia continue to
align itself with the West or move closer to Moscow? After 100 days in
office, Ivanishvili on February 5 told reporters that he was mending
Georgia’s relations with Russia—a promise on which he campaigned—though
he cautioned it might take some time. “It will not happen as fast as I
used to say,” he said.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2013/02/11/georgian-power-plays-famous-president-battles-billionaire-prime-minister.html
http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2013/02/11/georgian-power-plays-famous-president-battles-billionaire-prime-minister.html
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