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Georgian President Fighting For Political Survival

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  • Georgian President Fighting For Political Survival

    GEORGIAN PRESIDENT FIGHTING FOR POLITICAL SURVIVAL

    Arab Monitor
    Aug 13, 2008
    Italy

    Tbilisi, 13 August - Yesterday evening French President Nicolas
    Sarkozy left Moscow heading for the Georgian capital Tbilisi, where
    he held a joint press conference with Georgian President Michail
    Saakashvili. While Sarkozy was rather vague in informing the public
    about the six-point ceasefire agreement reached in Moscow, limiting
    himself to say Georgian forces would withdraw to their "permaent"
    barracks and the Russian forces would withdraw to positions held
    "before hostilities broke out", Saakashvili seized the momentum and
    held a flaming speech vowing that Georgia would never renounce full
    sovereignty over all of its territory, including the two disputed
    provinces. The Georgian President's declaration came in defiance
    of reported agreements between EU, represented by Nicolas Sarkozy
    and Russian President Medvedev, that Georgian troops would withdraw
    completely from South Ossetia and Abkhazia and that their future
    would be decided through a future referendum, to be held under
    international auspices.

    This morning, with the help of Western countries, the Georgian
    President organized a huge media event in Tbilisi on the square in
    front of the Paliament. While the public swayed Georgian and US flags,
    provided by the government, Saakashvili made his appearance, surrounded
    by hastily flown in anti-Russian leaders from the Baltic countries
    and the Ukraine. Launching heavy-handed cold-war style anti-Russian
    slogans Saakashvili presented Georgia as a heroic David fighting a
    brutal Goliath, apparently fighting for his political survival through
    an attempt to reposition himself as leader of an anti-Russian alliance
    of former Soviet-Union countries: he declared Georgia would break out
    of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), the organization
    of nine former Soviet Republics (Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus,
    Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Georgia, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan)
    and called on other CIS-members to do likewise.

    The spectacular media show in Tbilisi evolved as Russian tanks
    were still positioned at less than 60 kilimeters from Tbilisi and
    Moscow had made it clear that the decision when and to where it would
    withdraw, will remain its prerogative and would be decided in light
    of the Georgian government's decisions. As the government's effective
    control is rapidly shrinking to a narrow area surrounding the capital,
    to which the Georgian security forces had escaped under the impact
    of Russian fire, reports are coming in about lawlessness taking hold
    of the country amidst a surge of banditism in Georgian cities.
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