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Tbilisi: Commission investigates disappearance of USD 45 million

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  • Tbilisi: Commission investigates disappearance of USD 45 million

    The Messenger
    Tuesday, February 22, 2005

    Commission investigates disappearance of USD 45 million
    Credit allotted by Japan to rehabilitate two power stations in 1999-2002,
    but commission says 90 percent has been misused
    By Christina Tashkevich

    Parliamentarians accuse officials from
    the former government for siphoning of
    funds from a grant to rehabilitate portions
    of Georgia's troubled electricity system
    The Parliamentary Temporary Investigation Commission on violations in the
    energy sector met on Monday to discuss the fate of the USD 45 million credit
    allotted by Japan to the Georgian government to rehabilitate Khrami-2 and
    Lajanur hydroelectric power stations in 1999-2002.
    Head of the commission MP Gia Natsvlishvili said at the meeting that the
    credit should have been spent on "fully rehabilitating" these two
    hydroelectric stations. "As a result, Georgia would have 220 megawatts more
    this winter," he said.
    Natsvlishvili stressed that this would be a cheap energy resource "while we
    now have problems with Russian imports and have to buy very expensive
    energy."
    But according to the commission, the rehabilitation works are now in the
    same condition as they were when the credit was allotted. "About 90 percent
    of this credit has been misused," said Natsvlishvili.
    According to the commission chair, former high-ranking officials such as
    officials from the ministry of energy and heads of energy companies could
    have been involved in misusing the money. For example, he names the former
    Sakenergo Director and former minister of energy David Mirtskhulava as one
    suspect in this case. He thinks that the names of other people involved in
    this case will be revealed during an investigation by law enforcers.
    "The commission will discuss this issue, and it will decide whether to send
    the documents to the General Prosecutor's Office for launching a criminal
    case," Natsvlishvili explained on Monday.
    Meanwhile the head of the commission also commented on the fate of the other
    cases they sent to the Prosecutor's Office. "We monitor how the Prosecutor's
    Office investigates cases we have already sent to them," Natsvlishvili said.
    One particular issue the commission investigated was the rehabilitation of
    Enguri hydroelectric station. Natsvlishvili said the Prosecutor's Office
    launched two criminal cases on this issue, which are currently under
    investigation.
    Meanwhile, former minister David Mirtskhulava, who was also previously head
    of the National Energy Regulatory Commission, is accused of abuse of power
    and hiding secret materials.
    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, according to the Prosecutor's
    Office, he took secret materials relating to Georgia-Armenia criminal
    relations from the Energy Ministry and hid them in the office of the
    National Regulation Commission.
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