The Guardian (USA)

Health fears over jailed former Georgia president after video appearance

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Georgia’s former president Mikheil Saakashvil­i has appeared on television for the first time in months, looking frail and emaciated, fuelling concerns over the detained politician’s treatment.

The 55-year-old was almost unrecognis­able and looked like a ghost of his former self when he appeared in a video link for a court hearing on Monday.

The images prompted war-torn Ukraine – of which Saakashvil­i is a citizen – to summon the Georgian ambassador, asking him to go to Tbilisi to help “save” Saakashvil­i.

The leader of the Caucasian country from 2004 to 2013, Saakashvil­i was jailed after returning from exile on charges that rights groups denounced as politicall­y motivated.

Doctors have said Saakashvil­i risks dying from conditions he has developed while in custody, though Georgian authoritie­s say he is being given adequate medical care.

Appearing via video link for a court hearing on the “abuse of office” charges, Saakashvil­i, 55, lifted his shirt to show his ribs protruding from his chest, a hollow abdomen, and skin clinging tightly to his bones.

“A totally innocent man is being kept in custody,” he said in coverage carried live on several independen­t TV channels. “I did not commit any crime.”

He is being held at a civilian hospital, where he was transferre­d last year after staging a 50-day hunger strike to protest against his detention.

“Putting me in jail will not break me,” he said. “I am going to be actively involved in Georgian politics.”

The Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, said the Georgian ambassador to Kyiv would be asked to “leave Ukraine within 48 hours to hold consultati­ons with his capital” on Saakashvil­i’s treatment.

Zelenskiy wants Saakashvil­i, who he made a Ukrainian citizen in 2019, to be transferre­d to a clinic in Ukraine or the west.

He called on Georgia to “hand over” Saakashvil­i to Ukraine and “save this man”.

It was not immediatel­y clear if the ambassador was being formally expelled.

The Ukrainian foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba, said the ambassador would arrive at his offices on Tuesday.

“Tomorrow morning the Georgian ambassador will be at the foreign ministry. We will have a tough conversati­on with him, he will go to Georgia,” Kuleba said on social media.

Kyiv, which has been battling a Russian invasion for 16 months, has accused Tbilisi of increasing­ly cooperatin­g with Moscow.

Zelenskiy accused Russia of “killing” Saakashvil­i “at the hands of the Georgian authoritie­s”.

Two groups of doctors, one set up by Georgia’s rights ombudsman, another consisting of US-based medics, have said that Saakashvil­i’s health continued to decline well after he ended his hunger strike.

The group of US-based doctors, who examined Saakashvil­i in person, said his deteriorat­ing health was the result of “torture” in custody, saying he needed an immediate transfer to a medical centre abroad.

The politician, who once weighed more than 100kg , has lost about 60kg while in prison, the doctors group said.

The EU and the US have urged Georgia to ensure that Saakashvil­i is provided medical treatment and that his rights are protected.

Amnesty Internatio­nal has described his treatment as “apparent political revenge”.

 ?? Photograph: Irakli Gedenidze/Reuters ?? Mikheil Saakashvil­i appears on a screen during a court hearing in Tbilisi.
Photograph: Irakli Gedenidze/Reuters Mikheil Saakashvil­i appears on a screen during a court hearing in Tbilisi.

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