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Tbilisi arrests suspect in Bush grenade incident, Questions Remain

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  • Tbilisi arrests suspect in Bush grenade incident, Questions Remain

    Eurasia Daily Monitor
    The Jamestown Foundation
    July 25 2005


    TBILISI ARRESTS SUSPECT IN BUSH GRENADE INCIDENT, BUT MANY QUESTIONS
    REMAIN

    By Zaal Anjaparidze


    Bush grenade suspect, Vladimir Arutyunian, has ties to Armenia,
    Russia After an intense search, on July 20 Georgian police arrested
    an individual suspected of tossing a hand-grenade towards U.S.
    President George W. Bush during his speech at Tbilisi's Freedom
    Square on May 10.

    Vladimir Arutyunian, 27, is an ethnic Armenian resident of Tbilisi.
    The police tracked Arutyunian down using an anonymous telephone tip
    received after local authorities published a photo of the suspect on
    July 18. Arutyunian vigorously resisted when three officers from the
    Ministry of Interior attempted to enter his apartment in
    Vashli-Jvari, a suburb of Tbilisi, to arrest him and was wounded in
    the process.

    Arutyunian shot to death Zurab Kvlividze, 37, head of the
    Anti-Terrorist Department of the Interior Ministry, who had managed
    to wound Arutyunian when he was trying to escape. Eyewitnesses said
    that Kvlividze made a fatal error when he allowed the wounded
    Arutyunian time to rise to his feet and shoot.

    While the police called for an ambulance for their wounded colleague,
    Arutyunian fled to a nearby park. Additional police converged on the
    park and managed to take the suspect into custody after a two-hour
    chase.

    At a special press conference late on July 20, Georgian Interior
    Minister Vano Merabishvili emphasized that the ministry's
    investigative group, in cooperation with U.S. specialists, have
    conducted an enormous investigation over the last few months and
    managed to identify Arutyunian. The police inquiry accelerated after
    a photo of the suspect was published along with the announcement of a
    reward of 150,000 Laris (about $82,000) for information leading to
    the arrest of the suspect. In two days the ministry's hotline
    received more than 150 anonymous calls.

    Merabishvili said it would take time to prove Arutyunian's
    involvement in the attempt on the U.S. President's life. Arutyunian's
    mother, Angela, was also detained and interrogated by police. She
    told journalists that she had not seen her son for three days before
    July 20. "I cannot believe that my son committed this crime," she
    declared. Mrs. Arutyunian told journalists that they had shown her
    four photographs and asked her whether the man in the photos was her
    son. "I told them that the man on the photographs did not look like
    my son," she said.

    Arutyunian's neighbors say that the family lives in extreme poverty.
    They say that the suspect grew up without a father and that he is a
    loner. They characterize him as a close-mouthed person leading a
    secluded life. A medical examination has yet to determine
    Arutyunian's state of mind.

    At a July 21 news conference, Merabishvili revealed that the suspect
    was arrested after police received valuable information from several
    citizens, who had called the hotline after the Interior Ministry
    issued photos of the suspect. Merabishvili said that the reward would
    go to several persons whose information had helped law enforcement
    capture the suspect. The identities of those persons will remain
    confidential. According to Merabishvili, an investigation is underway
    to determine if Arutyunian had any co-conspirators.

    Additionally, video footage issued by the Ministry on July 21 and
    broadcast by Georgian television showed Arutyunian's apartment where
    police found several hand-grenades, military uniforms, a night-vision
    device, several gasmasks, and military guidelines. The origin of this
    military ammunition has yet to be clarified.

    Later on July 21, the Ministry released a short interview with the
    suspect. The footage showed Arutyunian admitting that he had tossed a
    hand grenade into the crowd during President Bush's speech.
    Arutyunian not only confessed to his crime, but he also said that he
    would make another attempt if the opportunity presents itself,
    according to Deputy Healthcare Minister Irakli Giorgobiani.
    Giorgobiani, however, underlined that the suspect was suffering from
    shock, "so his confession cannot be trusted one hundred percent."

    Hospital personnel also said that Arutyunian demonstrated some
    command of the English language when he cursed the FBI investigators
    who came to see him in the hospital. (FBI experts were also seen in
    the suspect's apartment shortly after the arrest.) According to
    medical personnel, the suspect has three wounds that do not represent
    any immediate danger to his life. Although the Interior Ministry
    initially announced that Arutyunian's whereabouts would not be
    disclosed for security reasons, this information quickly became
    public. Currently the suspect is under heavy guard at the Central
    Republican Hospital.

    The Russian hand grenade that triggered this case was manufactured in
    Armenia. The Armenian origin of Arutyunian has already caused some
    speculation. One rumor has him possibly connected with the Russian
    military bases currently stationed in Georgia. On July 21, Vladimir
    Kuparadze, Deputy Commander of the Group of Russian Troops in the
    Trans-Caucasus (GRTT) said that Arutyunian "has no connections with
    GRTT."

    Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili and U.S. officials highly
    praised the work of the Georgian Interior Ministry. Nevertheless,
    several questions remain unanswered, such as why Arutyunian, if
    guilty, did not attempt to either hide or leave Georgia after the
    incriminating photos were released.

    The main question, however, is whether Arutyunian is the actual
    person who tossed the grenade and, if so, whether he is an isolated
    individual or a pawn guided by others. Some Georgian intelligence
    experts doubt that Arutyunian had been recruited by any foreign
    special service, judging by his odd behavior after the unsuccessful
    attempt. However, Givi Targamadze, chair of the Georgian
    parliamentary committee for defense and security, and his deputy,
    Nika Rurua, argue that Arutyunian's personality might make him easily
    manipulated by foreign intelligence agents.

    In his July 23 interview, Arutyunian confirmed that he had intended
    to kill President Saakashvili and President Bush. He said that he had
    tried to throw the grenade in such a manner that, if it exploded,
    that fragments would spray beyond the bulletproof glass protecting
    the two men.

    Tbilisi City Court sentenced Arutyunian to three months in pre-trial
    detention on July 23.

    (TV-Rustavi-2, TV-Imedi, Interfax-AVN, Gazeta.ru, Regnum July 20-24).
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