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  • Death of Georgia's Prime Minister Fuels Speculation

    Death of Georgia's Prime Minister Fuels Speculation
    By Anna Arutunyan and Oleg Liakhovich

    The Moscow News
    14.02.05 Monday

    Georgia's Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania died last week in what appeared
    to be a tragic accident involving household gas, but his death has
    fueled fantastic speculations surrounding Georgia's geopolitical
    relationship to Russia since President Mikhail Saakashvili came to
    power one year ago in a coup much like Ukraine's.

    Zhvania, accompanied by security guards, was visiting his friend,
    deputy governor of the Kvema Kartli region Raul Yusupov, in his home
    on Wednesday night. After the guards lost touch with him over the
    phone, they broke down the door and found the prime minister dead,
    slumped over a table set with food and backgammon. His friend was
    found dead in the kitchen.

    Preliminary investigations linked the deaths with gas poisoning.

    Investigators initially suspected a gas leak, while medics determined
    the cause of death to be carbon-monoxide poisoning. There were no
    signs of violence in the apartment or on Zhvania's body. But there
    was also no evidence of a gas leak in the stove; investigators believe
    that carbon monoxide had accumulated in the room.

    The Prosecutor General has said that FBI experts will join a team of
    forensic analysts to ascertain the circumstances of Zhvania's death.

    Zhvania seemed an unlikely target for an assassination. He had
    headed the majority political party under Eduard Shevardnadze's
    administration, and was instrumental in guiding the country through
    a bloodless transformation when Shevardnadze was ousted from power
    after Saakashvili's landslide victory. Saakashvili, however, insisted
    on territorial integrity for his country, which has suffered years
    of war in two breakaway regions - Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Russia,
    meanwhile, has backed the separation of Abkhazia, going as far as to
    grant Russian citizenship to its residents. After the Revolution of
    Roses, the conflict in the regions escalated, heightening tensions
    between Russia and the former Soviet state.

    In light of this, Georgian parliamentarian Amiran Shalamberidze
    said on Thursday that Russia was behind the poisoning, and linked
    Zhvania's death to a car bombing that killed three policemen in Gori,
    the Georgian city nearest to South Ossetia, earlier this week. On the
    day he died, Zhvania had cautioned against blaming South Ossetians
    for the car bombing.

    The allegations were immediately blasted, however, by Georgian
    officials. Indeed, Zhvania was a moderate who had always tried to
    seek a compromise, and had backed Russia for peaceful negotiations
    in Abkhazia.

    Still, Saakashvili's slip of the tongue - "About Zhvania's
    murder... I'm sorry, death" during a conference Friday only added
    more weight to various allegations. The wife of Yusupov suggested that
    the meeting between her husband and Zhvania was initially planned for
    another apartment. And former speaker of Shevarnadze's party, Irina
    Sarishvili-Chanturia blatantly implicated the Georgian government in
    Zhvania's death.

    If it was a rumor, it never seemed to die. While Russian commentators
    speculated on national television that Saakashvili himself may
    have been behind Zhvania's death, the murder of Zhvania's friend,
    Georgian businessman Mamuk Dzhincharadze, in Moscow on Saturday,
    only corroborated the speculations.

    Dzhincharadze headed the SlavTek oil company in Russia, where he was
    a parliamentarian in the Siberian city of Nizhnevartovsk. But he had
    also been invited personally by Zhvania to take part in last summer's
    Russia-Georgia business forum.

    With over a week to go before the official verdict on Zhvania's cause
    of death, Moscow tabloids, citing law enforcement authorities, rushed
    to note that Dzhincharadze had enemies both in Russia and Georgia.
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