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Georgian official shrugs off rumors Zhvania's death plotted

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  • Georgian official shrugs off rumors Zhvania's death plotted

    ArmenPress
    Feb 3 2005

    GEORGIAN OFFICIAL SHRUGS OFF RUMORS THAT ZHVANIA'S DEATH MAY HAVE
    BEEN PLOTTED

    TBILISI, FEBRUARY 3, ARMENPRESS: A senior official of Georgian
    president's staff has shrugged off today a theory circulated by some
    local mass media and politicians that prime minister Zurab Zhvania's
    death may have been plotted by his enemies. Guram Absadze, deputy
    chief of Saakashvili's staff, told reporters: "I do not think that
    there are people who would have masterminded Zhvania's death. No one
    in Georgia wanted his death. He was a member of the united team with
    president Saakashvili."
    Meantime a parliament member Alexander Shalamberidze was quoted by
    Georgian news agencies as saying there was a link between a deadly
    car explosion near police station in the town of Gori, 60 miles off
    Tbilisi, earlier this week that killed three people and Zhvania's
    death.
    "My impression is that these two tragic occurrences were not
    accidental and were plotted by forces outside Georgia," he told
    journalists.
    Zurab Zhvania , 42, was killed by a gas leak at a friend's
    apartment. Security guards broke through a window early Thursday when
    they heard no signs of life inside the apartment several hours after
    the prime minister arrived. Zhvania's host, Zurab Usupov, deputy
    governor of Georgia's Kvemo-Kartli region, also died.
    A longtime politician, Zhvania was part of the opposition to
    former Georgian President Eduard Shevardnadze and played a prominent
    role in protests that led to Shevardnadze's ouster after allegedly
    fraudulent elections in November 2003.
    He was named prime minister by Saakashvili following his landslide
    election in January 2004. Zhvania was one of the key government
    figures trying to negotiate settlements with Georgia's separatist
    regions.
    Zhvania was born in the capital Tbilisi on Dec. 9, 1963. A
    graduate of the biology department at Tbilisi State University, he
    led the Green of Georgia party in 1988-93 and served in the
    parliament beginning in 1992.
    He was elected parliamentary speaker in 1995 and led the United
    Democrats opposition party. Zhvania is survived by his wife and three
    children.
    Georgian president Mikhail Saakashvili presented his condolences
    on the death of prime minister Zurab Zhvania. "It is very hard for me
    to speak today. This is a blow on our country and on me personally,
    as for the President and a person. Georgia lost a great patriot, who
    devoted his whole life to serving our country," Saakashvili said at a
    special government's session on February 3.
    "I lost the closest friend I had, the most reliable adviser and
    the greatest ally. Now, all my thoughts are with Zurab's wife, his
    mother and his children. In these hard times for the country and for
    us, I call on everybody to be strong, to stand together and continue
    to serve our country, despite any troubles and problems we face,"
    Saakashvili said.
    Also Russian president Vladimir Putin sent a letter of condolences
    to Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili on the occasion of the
    death of Zurab Zhvania.
    The OSCE Permanent Council held a minute's silence on Thursday in
    honor of Georgian Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania after his unexpected
    death.
    The Chairman of the Permanent Council, Ambassador Janez Lenarcic
    of Slovenia, said the Slovenian Chairmanship had learned with great
    sadness of the Prime Minister's death.
    "We are deeply shocked by this tragic news," he said. "Prime
    Minister Zhvania was an important figure who played a leading role in
    the transformation of Georgia and its development towards greater
    democracy and economic reform."
    "He was also pivotal in the quest for a peaceful resolution of the
    Georgian-Ossetian conflict, recently leading a constructive dialogue
    with all sides."
    Reacting to the announcement of the death of the Georgian Prime
    Minister Zurab Zhvania, Parliamentary Assembly President Rene van der
    Linden and Secretary General Terry Davis declared that they had lost
    a very close friend and expressed their deepest condolences to his
    family and to the people of Georgia. ''Georgia has lost its Prime
    Minister at a time when his energy, political skill and commitment to
    European values would have been of crucial importance,'' said Rene
    van der Linden.
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