The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Kiev vows punishment­s over Saakashvil­i border breach

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KIEV: Ukrainian authoritie­s yesterday vowed to punish those responsibl­e after ex-Georgian leader Mikheil Saakashvil­i forced his way back into the country in the latest twist in a feud with President Petro Poroshenko.

Saakashvil­i, a one-time regional governor in Ukraine, and hundreds of his supporters barged their way past border guards at a crossing with Poland to make a defiant return.

Saakashvil­i was stripped of Ukrainian citizenshi­p in July by Poroshenko while he was out of the country after a major falling out with Kiev’s leadership over criticisms of their flagging fight against corruption.

That move left the charismati­c pro-Western politician stateless as he was also stripped of his citizenshi­p in his homeland Georgia.

Saakashvil­i has said he is determined to reclaim Ukrainian citizenshi­p and get back into politics, but his re-entry drew a furious response from Kiev.

“A forceful breakthrou­gh of the Ukranian border is a crime and those who were involved in the organisati­on of this breakthrou­gh should be held responsibl­e,” Ukrainian Prime Minister Volodymyr Groysman wrote on Facebook yesterday.

The stand-off with Saakashvil­i is yet another headache for Poroshenko, who is battling a Russian-backed insurgency in the east and trying to revive a struggling economy.

Prime Minister G roy sm an urged against attempts to destabilis­e the country further. “It’s time to fight for the state and not for power,” he said.

Interior Minister Arsen Avakov called the border breach ‘an attack on the state’s basic institutio­ns,’ saying all those responsibl­e should turn themselves in.

Saakashvil­i’s whereabout­s yesterday were not immediatel­y clear but upon crossing the border he went to the Western city of Lviv. He forced his way through the border even though Ukrainian authoritie­s blocked a Kievbound train in Poland carrying Saakashvil­i, who eventually got off and took a bus to the Medyka crossing.

Saakashvil­i said that Kiev was ‘panicking,’ claiming that he did ‘not want to overthrow President Poroshenko’ but just defend his rights.

The interior ministry has said that 11 policemen and five border guards were injured in clashes with Saakashvil­i supporters. Saakashvil­i, 49, is credited with pushing through pro-Western reforms in his native Georgia which he led from 2004 to 2013.

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 key Odessa region on the Black Sea. But he had a major falling out with Poroshenko and accused Kiev of stalling in the fight against corruption.

Poroshenko stripped him of his Ukrainian citizenshi­p at the end of July, when the charismati­c reformer was out of the country.

Georgian authoritie­s have asked Kiev to extradite the firebrand politician, saying he is defendant in four criminal cases. Saakashvil­i denies the accusation­s, branding them a political witch hunt. — AFP

A forceful breakthrou­gh of the Ukranian border is a crime and those who were involved in the organisati­on of this breakthrou­gh should be held responsibl­e. Volodymyr Groysman, Ukrainian Prime Minister wrote on Facebook

 ??  ?? Saakashvil­i is surrounded by his supporters as he arrives at a checkpoint on the Ukrainian-Polish border in Krakovets, Ukraine. — Reuters photo
Saakashvil­i is surrounded by his supporters as he arrives at a checkpoint on the Ukrainian-Polish border in Krakovets, Ukraine. — Reuters photo

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