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Georgian Opposition Leader Patarkatsishvili Dies In London

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  • Georgian Opposition Leader Patarkatsishvili Dies In London

    GEORGIAN OPPOSITION LEADER PATARKATSISHVILI DIES IN LONDON

    RIA Novosti
    12:33 | 13/ 02/ 2008

    TBILISI, February 13 (RIA Novosti) - Georgian opposition leader Badri
    Patarkatsishvili, accused by Georgian authorities of attempting to
    instigate a coup during protests in the South Caucasus country last
    year, has died in London.

    His death, which is thought to have occurred late on Tuesday, was
    announced on Georgian public television as the result of a heart
    attack.

    Patarkatsishvili, 52, was one of the most influential opposition
    leaders in the ex-Soviet republic and Georgia's richest man. He came
    third in the recent January 5 presidential polls, garnering 7.1%
    of the vote.

    "Medical experts are ascertaining the cause of death [of
    Patarkatsishvili].

    It's my view that he was stressed over recent events in Georgia. I
    think this was the cause of Badri Patarkatsishvili's death," said
    Rati Shartava, the former head of the tycoon's campaign headquarters.

    However, Patarkatsishvili's personal doctor later said that the tycoon
    had never suffered from heart problems. An autopsy will be held today.

    In an interview with The Sunday Times in December, the tycoon said he
    feared he might be the target of an assassination plot. He referred
    to a tape recording allegedly containing a conversation between a
    Georgian interior ministry official and a Chechen warlord.

    "Whoever was to do this . . . we want to be able to explain to the
    people in Georgia that it was Russia," the alleged official tells
    the warlord during the recording.

    A warrant was issued by Georgian authorities for Patarkatsishvili's
    arrest late last year on charges of plotting a coup during November
    street protests in Tbilisi against Georgian President Mikheil
    Saakashvili. The businessman denied the accusations, although admitted
    offering a large sum of money to a senior interior ministry official
    in a bid to secure police support for protesters. The billionaire's
    bank accounts at Georgia's Standartbank were also frozen in connection
    with the case.

    The businessman also owned a stake in the Georgian independent
    television station Imedi, which aired anti-government broadcasts until
    it was closed down by Georgian authorities in November. The station
    was later reopened, although its future status remains uncertain.

    The coup charges came days after presidential elections in which
    Saakashvili was reelected as Georgian president, gaining around 53%
    of the vote. The opposition claims that the vote was rigged.

    Patarkatsishvili repeatedly delayed his arrival in Georgia for election
    campaigning over what he said was a lack of security guarantees from
    the government.

    Badri Patarkatsishvili was born into a Jewish family in Tbilisi. His
    involvement in the Soviet-era Communist youth organization, the
    Komsomol, subsequently helped him secure important contacts. His
    business activities were closely associated with Boris Berezovsky,
    a fugitive Russian tycoon living in London, who faces corruption and
    coup plotting charges in Russia.

    The Georgian tycoon had himself faced a series of corruption charges,
    including in the case of Berezovsky's LogoVAZ group, of which
    Patarkatsishvili was a deputy general director.

    The tycoon lived in Moscow for several years in the 1990s and was
    involved in the Russian media business. He was also the chairman of
    the Georgian soccer club Dynamo Tbilisi.

    He is survived by a wife and two daughters.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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