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Family Challenges Official Stance On Georgia X-Prime Minister Death

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  • Family Challenges Official Stance On Georgia X-Prime Minister Death

    RFE/RL Georgia: Family Challenges Official Stance On Prime Minister's Death
    Friday, 27 May 2005

    By Jean-Christophe Peuch

    On 3 February, Georgian Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania was found dead in a
    Tbilisi apartment along with a friend, 25-year-old Raul Yusupov.
    Authorities have declared the deaths a case of poisoning caused by a
    faulty gas heater. U.S. investigators have -- at least publicly --
    backed the accident theory, saying they see no reason to challenge the
    official account of events. But the late prime minister's widow has cast
    doubt over the government probe. Also, his brother tells RFE/RL that he
    suspects foul play and demands an independent investigation.

    Prague, 27 May 2005 (RFE/RL) -- The death of the 41-year-old Zurab
    Zhvania sent a shockwave throughout Georgia, prompting President Mikheil
    Saakashvili to call for national unity amid speculation that his team
    would be unable to recover and would soon fall apart.

    Addressing reporters on the eve of Georgia's Independence Day,
    Saakashvili on 25 May described Zhvania's death as a personal loss.

    "This year I lost my closest brother-in-arms, a friend, and my most
    valuable adviser -- such was Zurab Zhvania to me," Saakashvili said. "It
    was a strong blow to me and a strong blow to the country -- but
    especially to me. It took me several months to pull myself together,
    stand firmly on my feet again, and I had no right to show people how
    difficult it was for me."

    Commenting on the televised press conference the following day, Georgian
    media noted the president had failed to address the many questions that
    keep swirling around the official probe into Zhvania's death.

    Opposition leaders, independent legal experts, and journalists, family
    members, and friends of the late prime minister have from the onset
    raised doubts about the official version given by the government.
    The haste with which authorities concluded that the two men died of
    poisoning -- even before the forensic examination had started -- and the
    contradictory official statements regarding the volume of carbon
    monoxide contained in their bodies aroused particular suspicion.


    The haste with which authorities concluded that the two men died of
    poisoning -- even before the forensic examination had started -- and the
    contradictory official statements regarding the volume of carbon
    monoxide contained in their bodies aroused particular suspicion.

    Elene Tevdoradze, a member of the Georgian parliament's majority,
    indicated as early as 9 February that she and other close friends of the
    late prime minister had doubts that the men died as the result of an
    accident.

    The following day, on 10 February, Davit Gamkrelidze, the leader of the
    minority opposition in parliament, demanded that the legislature conduct
    its own investigation into Zurab Zhvania's death.

    "We must tell the public -- not only our own citizens, but also the
    entire world -- whether this was a tragic accident, or a cruel contract
    killing, and what the government is planning to do about this,"
    Gamkrelidze said.

    The largely pro-government parliament, however, did not follow suit.

    Since February, Zurab Zhvania's younger brother, Goga (Giorgi), has been
    conducting his own investigation with the help of friends, relatives,
    and Yusupov's family. He told RFE/RL he believes the official probe is
    flawed.

    "I've been collecting information [on the circumstances surrounding my
    brother's death] for several months now and this information is arousing
    serious queries with regard to this [official] version," Goga Zhvania said.

    Goga Zhvania has demanded that an independent probe -- possibly
    involving European experts -- be conducted into his brother's death. He
    said he will officially press Saakashvili to authorize such an
    investigation when he meets with him on 28 May.

    Asked whether he thinks his brother was assassinated, Goga Zhvania said:
    "Before I only had suspicions. Now, I'm almost sure he was. Zurab had
    many, many enemies."

    Zurab Zhvania's widow, Nino Kadagidze, said she shares her
    brother-in-law's concerns regarding the official probe.

    In comments broadcast on television on 25 May, Kadagidze charged that
    Georgian authorities were "doing their utmost to substantiate the
    accident theory" while neglecting all other possible versions.

    "The investigators must either admit this was not an accident, or
    produce evidence showing this was an accident," Kadagidze said. "There
    is no other alternative."

    Government officials have repeatedly dismissed the assassination theory.
    Saakashvili spokesman Gela Charkviani on 4 April said there was no doubt
    that Zurab Zhvania's death was accidental.

    "When professionals say something, one ought to trust them," Charkviani
    said. "In the present case, we're talking about two groups of
    professionals -- one made up of Georgians professionals who investigated
    this case, and one made up of FBI agents whose conclusions coincide
    [with those of the Georgian investigators]."

    Upon a request made by Georgian authorities, a group of FBI officers
    arrived in Tbilisi on 8 February to help investigate Zurab Zhvania's death.

    Three days later, Bryan Paarmann, the legal attache of the U.S. Embassy
    in Georgia, announced that the American experts had found no evidence
    that would contradict the initial conclusions of their Georgian
    colleagues and that there was "no reason to allege that a third party
    was involved in the incident."

    Yet, Goga Zhvania maintains that the FBI conclusions were in fact quite
    different.

    "The FBI investigators conducted an experiment in the apartment [where
    Zurab and Raul were found dead] and examined the organs of the
    deceased," Goga Zhvania said. "Forensic examination had shown carbon
    monoxide had spread into the bodies of the deceased, causing death by
    poisoning. [The U.S. team] tested the apartment's gas heater.
    Officially, the carbon monoxide found in the bodies of the two deceased
    had leaked out from this gas heater. But the tests made by the U.S.
    investigators show the heater was functioning ideally and that there had
    obviously been no carbon-monoxide leak [in the apartment]."

    Goga Zhvania said his assertions are based on a copy of the FBI report
    he obtained from the Prosecutor-General's Office. He also said the U.S.
    document and the official Georgian translation differ widely and
    sometimes even contradict each other.

    Attempts to obtain a copy of the report from the FBI produced no
    immediate results. An agency spokeswoman in Washington told RFE/RL that
    no information could be provided regarding the document until a Freedom
    of Information Act request is filed.

    Goga Zhvania cited what he says are other "troubling facts" regarding
    the official probe. For example, he said, no fingerprints of the
    deceased were found in the apartment where the prime minister's
    bodyguards reportedly found the bodies shortly after 4:00 a.m. He also
    pointed to another detail.

    "No cigarette butts that could have been left by Zurab were found [in
    the apartment]," Gogi Zhvania said. "He had a peculiar way of stubbing
    out his cigarettes. Also, the testimonies given by his bodyguards are
    extremely dubious. Sometimes they contradict each other, sometimes they
    lead to a dead end."

    Kadagidze on 25 May also cited discrepancies she noted in the
    testimonies of Zurab Zhvania's bodyguards.

    She also alleged that the head of her late husband's security team
    spirited away keys from the prime minister's dead body and rushed to the
    State Chancellery. She claimed many documents were later found missing
    from his safe.

    Goga Zhvania said that so far there have been no attempts to prevent him
    from investigating his brother's death. However, he complained of what
    he described as "psychological pressure."

    "There have been no threats per se. But some people told me that should
    I continue to dig for clues, I would regret it," Goga Zhvania said.


    http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2005/05/68ae18e9-e88d-4e71-a6c3-a4b2b15f3efe.html
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