Saakashvili vows political comeback after return
FORMER Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili vowed yesterday to reclaim his place in Ukrainian politics after he defied the authorities and forced his way back into the country.
Saakashvili, a former regional governor of Ukraine’s key Odessa region, and hundreds of his supporters on Sunday barged their way past guards at a border crossing with Poland.
Saakashvili’s dramatic return is the latest twist in a bitter feud with President Petro Poroshenko, who stripped him of Ukrainian citizenship in July.
Poroshenko vowed to punish those responsible for Saakashvili’s breach of the border, while observers said they feared the ugly political spat would hit Ukraine’s international image.
Saakashvili yesterday insisted he aimed to restore his Ukrainian citizen- ship and get back into politics.
“I want to say that this is the beginning of my fight,” he said, adding he had a plan to turn Ukraine’s economy around. “We should have democracy in our country and should not have the diktat of the oligarchs.”
Poroshenko cancelled Saakashvili’s passport after the two had a major falling out over the ex-Georgian leader’s accusations that Kiev was failing to make good on the fight against corruption. That move left the charismatic pro-Western politician stateless as he had earlier been stripped of his citizenship in his homeland Georgia.
The failure to stop Saakashvili returning was an embarrassment for Kiev and another headache for a leader fighting a Russian-backed insurgency and trying to restart a struggling economy.
“A crime has been committed,” Poroshenko said earlier yesterday. “There should be an absolutely unequivocal legal, judicial responsibility.”
Poroshenko said he saw no difference between pro-Russian rebels breaching Ukraine’s border in the east and “politicos” making their re-entry from the west. Interior Minister Arsen Avakov called the border breach “an attack on the state’s basic institutions”.
Saakashvili, 49, is credited with pushing through pro-Western reforms in his native Georgia which he led from 2004 to 2013 after rising to power during the so-called Rose Revolution in 2003.
In the wake of the pro-Western revolution in Kiev he moved to Ukraine in 2015 to work for the country’s authorities as governor of the Odessa region on the Black Sea.
Some analysts say Saakashvili is seeking to rouse supporters and eventually unseat Poroshenko.
“Saakashvili’s return to Ukrainian politics was triumphant albeit scandalous,” Vadym Karasyov, director of the Kiev-based Institute of Global Strategies, said.
As of this May, the approval rating of Saakashvili’s party, the Movement of New Forces, stood at 1.1 percent, according to a local pollster.
Saakashvili was accompanied by former Ukrainian prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko, who some critics say is hoping to ride the firebrand politician’s coattails back to power.
Footage showing chaotic scenes of Saakashvili’s supporters overpowering border guards went viral, with proWestern lawmaker Svitlana Zalishchuk labelling it a “circus”. Ukrainian authorities had blocked a Kiev-bound train carrying Saakashvili earlier on Sunday. He eventually got off the train and took a bus to Medyka, where he successfully crossed the border.