Summing up the first 100 days of heading the country, Georgian PM
Bidzina Ivanishvili blasted the “lies and slander” campaign waged by his
opponents and reported success in the economic and social spheres.
Ivanishvili said in his Tuesday speech that the people must not pay
attention to the fact that President Mikhail Saakashvili’s team
continues to spread lies as they did for the whole nine years of their
governance. “Their time is over,” the Georgian prime minister stated.
Ivanishvili’s Georgian Dream party, although launched only in 2011,
managed to win the parliamentary elections in October 2012. This ruined
Mikhail Saakashvili’s hopes of remaining in politics after the
expiration of his presidential term. Saakashvili is still Georgian
president, but his powers are very limited and his United National
Movement party is a minority faction in the parliament.
The PM
told reporters that his government had managed to achieve even greater
success than expected. In particular, he noted the drop in energy
tariffs, such as the 21-27 per cent drop in electricity prices, 10 per
cent drop in motor fuel prices, and the 10 per cent drop in natural gas
prices expected in February. The prices for pharmaceutical products
dropped by between 30 to 50 per cent, the Georgian leader said.
Ivanishvili
stressed that in the nearest future Georgian goods, in particular the
popular Georgian wines, will re-enter the markets of the Russian
Federation. He added that he possessed information that proved Russia
did not prevent Georgian wine imports over the past years, but it was
the previous Georgian administration which chose artificially to limit
the trade.
He added that the knowledge about these artificial
barriers had always allowed him to promise with confidence that the
Georgian goods would at some moment return to Russia.
Ivanishvili
also told the press that he did not intend to listen to Saakashvili’s
annual address to parliament which will be delivered on February 8,
because he was sure that the entire speech would be comprised of lies.
However,
in earlier statements representatives of Georgian Dream promised to
give Saakashvili a hard time during the address as, unlike the previous
parliament, they intended to make the president speak the truth.
Earlier,
Georgia’s former prime minister and the leader of the United National
Movement party, Vano Merabishvili, accused Ivanishvili and his allies of
political repressions and economic collapse, adding that the amnesty
declared by the new authorities seriously worsened the criminal
situation in the country.
In reply Ivanishvili noted that he
fully understood Merabishvili’s concerns as the former PM is under
investigation. Georgian law enforcers suspect him of abuse of office and
document forgery and, after several questionings, stated that he may
also be charged with giving false testimony.
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