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  • Tbilisi: Doctors call for release of former minister

    The Messenger, Georgia
    Feb 4 2005

    Doctors call for release of former minister

    Mirtskhulava's condition requires medical attention impossible to
    administer in prison hospital, they argue

    By Mary Makharashvili

    Doctors of Davit Mirtskhulava have said that the former chair of the
    Energy Regulatory Commission needs permanent treatment that is
    practically impossible to administer in the prison hospital.

    The doctors gave evidence on behalf of Mirtskhulava at
    Mtatsminda-Krtsanisi Regional Court on January 31, saying that his
    current condition is very serious, and that he needs to be released
    from prison so that he can receive the appropriate treatment. Doctor
    Irakli Seria also declared that he would assist Mirtskhulava in
    proving his innocence.

    Despite his poor health, the former chair of the Energy Regulatory
    Commission attended the court proceedings in the caged defendant's
    booth. Walking into the court room, he showed a serious limp, thought
    to be a result of his ill health and a heart attack earlier this
    year.

    There he heard his lawyer Otar Gamkrelidze state that Mirtskhulava is
    being detained illegally. "I think that he is an illegal prisoner as
    the charge that Prosecutor's Office has raised against him is not
    proved based on the law and that is why there are so many violations
    in this case," said Gamkrelidze.

    Another lawyer Eka Beselia commented on her colleague's vast
    experience, saying, "Gamkrelidze has directly said that he has never
    heard of this kind of a thing during his years of legal practice,"
    she said, adding that she has every confidence of proving her
    client's innocence.

    However, while Prosecutor Kakha Machavariani said Mirtskhulava's
    lawyers were entitled to express their opinions, he also repeated the
    charges facing Mirtskhulava: abuse of power and hiding secret
    materials.

    "He is accused of abuse of power while Georgian Minister of Fuel and
    Energy, which the Prosecutor's Office states seriously damaged the
    country economically," Eka Beselia explained to The Messenger.

    In particular, the General Prosecutor's Office named a contract
    agreed with Armenergo during the period when Mirtskhulava was
    minister, which the investigation claims is one-sided and
    artificially increased Georgian Railway's debt to Armenergo from USD
    4 million to USD 6 million.

    The investigation says that Mirtskhulava agreed to this in return for
    certain benefits - namely, helping mediator company
    Energomanqkorporatsia to embezzle 90 percent of the USD 6 million
    transmitted from Georgian Railway. Georgia still had to pay the debt
    as a result of the one-sided contract Mirtskhulava had signed.

    As for the second charge against Mirtskhulava - that he took secret
    materials relating to Georgia-Armenia criminal relationships from the
    Energy Ministry and hid them in the office of the National Regulation
    Commission - Beselia said that according to the legal documents could
    only be considered as hidden if Mirtskhulava had kept them at his
    private home or some other place besides the state structures.

    Mirtskhulava is the first high ranking official from the Shevardnadze
    administration whose case has come to court, as most others who have
    been charged by the General Prosecutor's Office have preferred to pay
    money for their freedom.

    The total sum that the Prosecutor's Office requests Mirtskhulava pay
    is over USD 2 million plus fines, but the former minister protests
    his innocence, adding that he does not have enough money to buy his
    way out of jail.

    If the court finds Mirtskhulava guilty he faces twelve years
    imprisonment, but as Beselia told The Messenger, they will not give
    up and will fight to the end to prove the truth, even if the case
    goes up to the European Court for Human Rights in Strasbourg.
    From: Baghdasarian
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