Saakashvili freed by court, urges government change
UKRAINE: Mikheil Saakashvili, the former Georgian president turned opposition leader in Ukraine, walked free yesterday after a court in the Ukrainian capital refused to sanction his arrest, vowing to push for a peaceful government change.
Saakashvili was arrested on Saturday on allegations that he colluded with Ukrainian businessmen tied to Russia to topple President Petro Poroshenko, accusations Saakashvili rejected.
‘‘I consider myself a prisoner of Ukrainian oligarchs,’' he said in an apparent reference to the business background of Poroshenko, who ran a chocolate business before he was elected president.
Prosecutors had asked to keep Saakashvili under house arrest, but the judge turned it down to the applause of Saakashvili’s supporters.
The court’s verdict marked a defeat for Poroshenko, who has faced mounting criticism for his failure to uproot endemic corruption.
The victorious Saakashvili said after the verdict that he will coordinate with other political forces in Ukraine to push for a peaceful change of government.
Saakashvili, who was refusing food to protest the arrest, said the first thing he wanted was to get back home and eat.
About 200 of Saakashvili’s supporters gathered outside the court and scuffled with police earlier.
On Monday, thousands of Saakashvili’s supporters marched across Kiev, demanding his release and calling for Poroshenko to be impeached.
Saakashvili was a key figure in the 2003 Rose Revolution protests that drove Georgian President Eduard Shevardnadze from office. He served two terms as Georgian president in 2004-2013, winning broad acclaim for his anticorruption efforts, but drawing criticism over a disastrous war with Russia and what his opponents saw as an authoritarian streak.
Poroshenko named him the governor of Ukraine’s Odessa region in 2015, but Saakashvili resigned the following year, claiming Poroshenko and other officials were impeding anticorruption reforms, and became a strong critic of his former patron.
Georgia stripped Saakashvili of his citizenship after his move to Ukraine.
Poroshenko this summer rescinded his Ukrainian citizenship while Saakashvili was out of the country, leaving Saakashvili stateless.
He forced his way into Ukraine in September, barging across the border from Poland with the help of a crowd of supporters. – AP