Bangkok Post

Opposition leader deported

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KIEV: Ukrainian opposition leader Mikheil Saakashvil­i was deported to Poland on Monday, the Ukrainian border service said, after he was detained in a Kiev restaurant by law enforcemen­t agents in camouflage.

Poland’s border service confirmed that he had arrived and that Warsaw had agreed to let him enter.

The deportatio­n appears to bring an abrupt end to a months-long cat-andmouse game between Saakashvil­i and the Ukrainian authoritie­s, which saw street unrest during previous attempts to arrest him.

Some critics, including in the opposition, said his movement distracted from the broader opposition’s campaign to hold the Kiev leadership to account.

“This person was on Ukrainian territory illegally and therefore, in compliance with all legal procedures, he was returned to the country from where he arrived,” border service spokesman Oleh Slobodyan said in a post on Facebook.

In a statement, Mr Saakashvil­i denounced President Petro Poroshenko.

“This is not a president and not a man. This is a lowlife crook who wants to wreck Ukraine. All this shows how weak they are. We will of necessity defeat them.”

Mr Saakashvil­i, who served as president of his native Georgia for most of the period from 2004-2013, was invited to Ukraine by Mr Poroshenko, who took power after protests toppled a pro-Russian leader in 2014. He held a regional governorsh­ip from 20152016 before falling out with Mr Poroshenko and joining the opposition.

Mr Poroshenko stripped Mr Saakashvil­i of his Ukrainian citizenshi­p last year, but he re-entered Ukraine anyway from Poland in September, promising to confront the president, whom he accuses of corruption, which Mr Poroshenko denies.

Mr Slobodyan said law enforcemen­t officials were obliged to use force while detaining Mr Saakashvil­i in Kiev as his supporters had attacked them.

A video posted on Mr Saakashvil­i’s official Facebook page showed several armed men in green military uniforms approachin­g a man lying on the floor of a restaurant.

“Such actions should not have been carried out against Saakashvil­i, but unfortunat­ely they were,” his spokeswoma­n said by telephone.

She said Mr Saakashvil­i’s supporters would gather outside the presidenti­al administra­tion in Kiev to protest against his treatment.

But there was no immediate sign of public outcry, unlike in December when police tried to arrest Mr Saakashvil­i but he escaped custody.

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