The Phnom Penh Post

Saakashvil­i vows political comeback after return

- Oleksandr Savochenko

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.

 ?? DYACHYSHYN/AFP YURI ?? Former Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvil­i (centre) and his supporters walk through the Ukrainian border at Shegyni’s checkpoint on Sunday.
DYACHYSHYN/AFP YURI Former Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvil­i (centre) and his supporters walk through the Ukrainian border at Shegyni’s checkpoint on Sunday.

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