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Georgian Government Stresses Stability as Search For New PM Begins

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  • Georgian Government Stresses Stability as Search For New PM Begins

    GEORGIAN GOVERNMENT STRESSES STABILITY AS SEARCH FOR NEW PRIME
    MINISTER BEGINS

    Eurasia Insight

    EurasiaNet.org
    2/04/05

    By Elizabeth Owen

    The search for a replacement for Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania, who died
    February 3 of carbon-monoxide poisoning, is underway. Political analysts
    in Tbilisi say there is `no obvious candidate' that can match Zhvania's
    technocratic skills.

    President Mikheil Saakashvili is expected to nominate a replacement for
    prime minister by February 10. A state funeral for Zhvania will be held
    at the newly constructed Holy Trinity Cathedral in Tbilisi on February
    6. Saakashvili's cabinet, meeting in a late-night session February 3,
    reportedly considered several prime ministerial candidates, the Civil
    Georgia website reported. While most political figures continue to
    emphasize the difficulty of replacing the prime minister, some Georgian
    media outlets have speculated on the leading contenders. In its February
    4 edition, for example, the daily Rezonansi reported that the top
    candidates to head the government included Defense Minister Irakli
    Okruashvili, State Minister for European Integration Giorgi Baramidze,
    State Minister for Economic Reform Issues Kakha Bendukidze and
    Parliament Speaker Nino Burjanadze.

    Few analysts in Tbilisi appeared to put much faith in such reports. `You
    can't take the stupid speculations of the Georgian media seriously,'
    said Levan Ramishvili, director of the Liberty Institute. Ramishvili
    also dismissed reports of a potential cabinet split prior to Zhvania's
    death.

    Ramishvili is just one of many political analysts in Tbilisi who
    emphasize that Georgia lacks a natural successor to Zhvania, who
    possessed the most political and administrative experience of any member
    of Saakashvili's reformist administration.

    Devi Khechinashvili, president of the Partnership for Social
    Initiatives, a public policy think tank, contended that one government
    leader who could at least replicate Zhvania's independence is
    Bendukidze, who oversees economic reforms. An influential businessman,
    Bendukidze returned last year to his native Georgia after nearly a
    decade in Russia. During his tenure in 2004 as economics minister,
    Bendukidze's proved an effective policy planner, but his advocacy of an
    aggressive privatization campaign generated considerable controversy.
    `He has no network here, he is a guy by himself, he has power by
    himself, and he can push things through, but he will have no political
    ambitions,' said Khechinashvili.

    Georgian newspaper reports have also focused on Defense Minister
    Okruashvili as a leading candidate to replace Zhvania. Though
    Khechinashvili agreed that Okruashvili's close ties to the president
    could enhance his chances, he expressed doubt that the 31-year-old
    defense minister, often portrayed as the most radical member of the
    Saakashvili administration, would accept the post of prime minister if
    nominated.

    `His [current] position is very powerful, and he is concentrated on a
    main priority of this government [modernization of the military
    according to North Atlantic Treaty Organization norms]. So what is the
    rationale [for him] to deal with social or economic issues right now?'
    Khechinashvili said. `It is much easier to upgrade the military than it
    is the social sphere or economy.'

    Ultimately, how the government navigates the transfer of power to a new
    prime minister will prove critical to the reform process, both analysts
    said. The most immediate impact of Zhvania's death will be on the speed
    of reforms, Ramishvili said. `We have to revise the division of powers
    between the president and the prime minister. The president will have to
    take on more strategic and tactical responsibilities to make sure that
    the government continues on with reforms,' Ramishvili said. With Zhvania
    gone, the powers of the ruling party could become more concentrated,
    added Khechinashvili, but how that will affect the quality of reforms is
    unknown.

    With the country still in shock over Zhvania's passing, government
    leaders remain intent on projecting an image of stability. Foreign
    Minister Salome Zourabichvili announced that she, along with
    Saakashvili, who has assumed much of Zhvania's responsibilities on an
    interim basis, would fulfill all of Zhvania's scheduled appointments in
    the coming days, the Russian agency Regnum.ru reported. Top government
    ministers, meanwhile, stressed in televised statements that key
    political and economic policies would not change.

    Authorities also sought to reassure Georgians that Zhvania's death was
    accidental. The US Federal Bureau of Investigation has agreed to help
    Georgian investigators, and will perform `biological and chemical tests'
    to determine `the exact cause' of Zhvania's death, Rustavi-2 television
    channel reported February 4.

    The circumstances surrounding Zhvania's death have prompted various
    conspiracy theories among Georgians. For example, as news of Zhvania's
    death was still spreading, Alexander Shalamberidze, a member of
    parliament, claimed publicly that Russia was behind both the recent
    car-bombing in Gori and Zhvania's death, and that the two events were
    linked. Russian diplomats have adamantly denied involvement in the two
    incidents. Meanwhile, Georgian Interior Minister Vano Merabishvili and
    General Prosecutor Zurab Adeishvili dismissed rumors of foul play.

    To downplay speculation about the cause of Zhvania's death, Merabishvili
    and Adeishvili showed Georgian journalists late February 3 a one-minute
    video tape with footage from the apartment where Zhvania and his friend,
    Raul Usupov, the deputy governor of the Kvemo Kartli region, were found.
    Both men were shown stretched out on the floor of Usupov's apartment
    after artificial respiration had been unsuccessfully performed, the
    Civil Georgia website reported.


    Editor's Note: Elizabeth Owen is EurasiaNet.org's regional news
    coordinator in Tbilisi.

    http://eurasianet.org/departments/insight/articles/eav020405.shtml
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