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  • MAIN PAGE: Aide to dead Georgian PM commits suicide: official

    Aide to dead Georgian PM commits suicide: official

    Agence France Presse
    02/04/2005

    TBILISI, Feb 4 (AFP) - An aide to Georgian prime minister Zurab Zhvania,
    who died apparently after breathing toxic fumes leaked by a faulty
    heater, committed suicide late Friday, an interior ministry spokesman said.

    The aide, 32-year-old Georgi Khelashvili, shot himself with a gun in his
    Tbilisi apartment, the spokesman said.

    Khelashvili was a member of Zhavania's staff, working with the pardons
    commission, the Mze television channel reported.

    It was not yet clear whether Khelashvili's suicide was linked to
    Zhvania`s death.

    Zhvania, Georgia's widely respected prime minister seen as the driving
    force behind market-oriented economic reform in the restive Caucasus
    republic, died early Thursday.

    The 41-year-old prime minister was found by his bodyguards slumped over
    a table in an apartment on the outskirts of Tbilisi, and appeared to
    have succumbed to inadequately ventilated carbon monoxide fumes from a
    heater.

    The body of another local Georgian official, Raul Yusupov, was found
    dead on the floor in another room in the apartment. There were no signs
    of foul play, and officials quickly quashed suspicions that the deaths
    could have been anything but accidental.

    News of Zhvania`s death sent shock waves through Georgia and President
    Mikhail Saakashvili, acting in line with the constitution, dismissed the
    entire Zhvania government, though its members were to remain in place on
    what is technically an interim basis pending confirmation of a new
    government.

    Saakashvili announced that he would take over Zhvania`s duties until a
    new government was installed. He was expected to name a new prime
    minister before February 10

    Zhvania was a father of three, who entered political life as an ally of
    veteran Georgian president Eduard Shevardnadze but later switched his
    allegiance to Saakashvili, becoming himself a leading figure in the 2003
    "rose revolution" that ousted Shevardnadze and swept the US-educated
    Saakashvili to power.

    His appointment last year as prime minister was a power-sharing
    arrangement that placed chief responsibility for introducing sweeping
    economic reforms in Georgia with the prime minister. Analysts said the
    reform process would be slowed as a result of Zhvania`s death.
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