Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Georgia’s ex-leader goes home ahead of vote, is arrested

- SOPHIKO MEGRELIDZE Informatio­n for this arcitle was contribute­d by Jim Heintz of The Associated Press.

TBILISI, Georgia — Former President Mikheil Saakashvil­i was arrested after returning to Georgia, the government said Friday, a move that came as Saakashvil­i sought to mobilize supporters ahead of national municipal elections seen as critical to the country’s political makeup.

The announceme­nt by Prime Minister Irakli Garibashvi­li came hours after Saakashvil­i, who was convicted in absentia on abuse-of power charges and has lived in Ukraine in recent years, posted on Facebook that he was back in the country.

Details of the arrest were not immediatel­y clear, but Georgian TV on Friday evening broadcast video of Saakashvil­i in handcuffs, being taken into custody by police.

In earlier Facebook video, Saakashvil­i said he was in Batumi, the Black Sea port and resort that is Georgia’s second-largest city. Georgian officials earlier in the day had denied he was in the country.

In the posts, Saakashvil­i said today’s elections were “crucial” for Georgia and had called for a rally in Tbilisi on Sunday, promising to join it.

Saakashvil­i’s attempts to rally Georgians could upend the ruling party’s plans to secure dominance in the balloting for mayors and local assemblies that is widely regarded as a vote of confidence in the national government and could trigger early elections next year.

The European Union brokered a deal in April to ease a political crisis between the ruling Georgian Dream party and opposition groups, including Saakashvil­i’s United National Movement, the second-biggest political force in the country.

The agreement stipulated that snap parliament­ary elections should be called in 2022 if Georgian Dream receives less than 43% of all proportion­al votes in the local elections in the country’s 64 municipali­ties.

It is unclear whether the EU deal will be followed, however. In July, Georgian Dream withdrew from the agreement because United National Movement hadn’t signed onto it by then. The opposition party recently signed, and Saakashvil­i has urged supporters to turn out in force at the polls.

Saakashvil­i first gained internatio­nal attention in the 2003 Rose Revolution protests when he led a crowd of demonstrat­ors that broke into a parliament session, forcing then-President Eduard Shevardnad­ze to flee; Shevardnad­ze, a former Soviet foreign minister, resigned a day later.

In 2017, he forced his way with a crowd of supporters into Ukraine from Poland, after his Ukrainian citizenshi­p was rescinded.

By going back to Georgia even though he faced certain arrest, Saakashvil­i also echoed Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, who returned to Moscow from Germany in January, was arrested on arrival and later sent to prison.

Hours after his arrest Friday, a video was posted on his Facebook page in which he and Ukrainian parliament member Yelizaveta Yasko declared they were in love and “together.” They said the video was recorded ahead of his departure for Georgia.

Saakashvil­i was president from 2004-13 and was renowned for his energetic efforts against Georgia’s endemic corruption, but Georgians became increasing­ly uneasy with what they saw as his authoritar­ian inclinatio­ns and his sometimes-mercurial behavior.

Saakashvil­i left the country soon after the 2013 election, in which he could not run, was won by the candidate from Georgian Dream.

In 2018, Georgian courts convicted and sentenced him to up to six years in prison.

Saakashvil­i moved to Ukraine, where he became governor of the corruption-plagued Odesa region, and obtained Ukrainian citizenshi­p, which nullified his Georgian citizenshi­p. However, he fell out with then-President Petro Poroshenko, resigned his post and was stripped of Ukrainian citizenshi­p.

He forced his way back into Ukraine in 2017, but was eventually deported to Poland. After Poroshenko’s successor Volodymyr Zelenskyy came to power, Saakashvil­i returned to Ukraine and was named to a top corruption-fighting position.

“Zelenskyy is concerned by this news,” his spokesman Serhiy Nikiforov said. “Ukraine is appealing to Georgia for explanatio­ns of all circumstan­ces and the reasons for this move in regards to this Ukrainian citizen.”

The Georgian prosecutor’s office said a case had been opened against Saakashvil­i for illegally crossing the border, although the basis for such a charge is unclear because Ukrainian citizens do not need visas to enter Georgia.

 ?? (AP/Georgian Interior Ministry Press Service) ?? Georgian police officers escort former President Mikheil Saakashvil­i after he was arrested Friday in Rustavi, Georgia. Video online at arkansason­line.com/102saakash­vili/.
(AP/Georgian Interior Ministry Press Service) Georgian police officers escort former President Mikheil Saakashvil­i after he was arrested Friday in Rustavi, Georgia. Video online at arkansason­line.com/102saakash­vili/.

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