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Mikheil Saakashvili

Mikheil Saakashvili (Georgian: მიხეილ სააკაშვილი Mikheil Saak’ashvili [ˈmiχeil ˈsaːkʼaʃʷili]; Ukrainian: Міхеіл Саакашвілі [m⁽ʲ⁾ixeˈil sɐːkɐʃˈwil⁽ʲ⁾i], also known as Misha in Georgia; born 21 December 1967) is a Georgian and Ukrainian politician and jurist.[7][8] He was the third president of Georgia for two consecutive terms from 25 January 2004 to 17 November 2013. From May 2015 until November 2016, Saakashvili was the governor of Ukraine's Odesa Oblast.[1][9] He is the founder and former chairman of the United National Movement party. Saakashvili heads the executive committee of Ukraine's National Reform Council since 7 May 2020.[10] In 2021 he began serving a six-year prison sentence in Georgia on charges of abuse of power and organization of an assault occasioning grievous bodily harm against an opposition lawmaker Valery Gelashvili.[11]

Mikheil Saakashvili
  • მიხეილ სააკაშვილი
  • Міхеіл Саакашвілі
Saakashvili in 2020
3rd President of Georgia
In office
20 January 2008 – 17 November 2013
Prime Minister
Preceded byNino Burjanadze (acting)
Succeeded byGiorgi Margvelashvili
In office
25 January 2004 – 25 November 2007
Prime Minister
Preceded byNino Burjanadze (acting)
Succeeded byNino Burjanadze (acting)
Governor of Odesa Oblast
In office
30 May 2015 – 9 November 2016[1]
Preceded byIhor Palytsia
Succeeded byMaksym Stepanov[2]
Minister of Justice
In office
12 October 2000 – 19 September 2001
PresidentEduard Shevardnadze
Prime MinisterGiorgi Arsenishvili
Preceded byJohn Khetsuriani
Succeeded byRoland Giligashvili
Prime Minister of Georgia
Acting
In office
3 February 2005 – 17 February 2005
PresidentHimself
Preceded byZurab Zhvania
Succeeded byZurab Noghaideli
Member of the Parliament of Georgia
In office
6 November 2001 – 22 November 2002
In office
25 November 1995 – 2 March 2001
Chairman of the Tbilisi City Assembly
In office
4 November 2001 – 2003
Chair of Union of Citizens Faction in the Parliament of Georgia
In office
15 September 1998 – 20 November 1999
In office
27 November 1999 – 10 October 2000
Chair of Legal Issues Committee in the Parliament of Georgia
In office
27 November 1995 – 15 September 1998
Chairman of the United National Movement
In office
2001 – 5 December 2015
Preceded byposition established
Succeeded byGrigol Vashadze
Honorary Chairman of the United National Movement
Assumed office
24 March 2019
Preceded byposition established
Personal details
Born (1967-12-21) 21 December 1967 (age 56)
Tbilisi, Georgian SSR, Soviet Union
Citizenship
Political party
Spouse
(m. 1994)
[6]
Children4
Education
Signature
Websitesaakashvilimikheil.com

Saakashvili entered Georgian politics in 1995. He served as member of parliament and minister of justice under President Eduard Shevardnadze. Saakashvili later moved to opposition, establishing the United National Movement party. In 2003, Saakashvili became a leading opposition figure who accused the government of rigging the 2003 Georgian parliamentary election, spearheading mass protests which saw President Shevardnadze resign from his post in the bloodless Rose Revolution. Saakashvili's key role in the protests led to him being elected as the President in 2004. He was later reelected as President in 2008. However, his party suffered defeat in the 2012 Georgian parliamentary election, while Saakashvili was barred by the constitution of Georgia from seeking a third term in the 2013 presidential election, which was also won by the opposition candidate.

During his tenure as president, Saakashvili oversaw police, military, economic and government reforms. As the new Patrol Police department was established, the entire police force was fired and replaced with new one in an effort to root out corruption. The bureaucratic spendings were decreased as several ministries were abolished to cut the government size. Military budget rose to 9.2% of GDP by 2007 to strengthen the nation's defense capability. The government pursued a zero-tolerance policy towards crime. Saakashvili appointed Kakha Bendukidze as the Minister of Economy to implement economic liberalization and rapid privatization. Georgia's economy grew 70% between 2003 and 2013, and per capita income roughly tripled. However, poverty only marginally declined. At the end of Saakashvili's second term, about a quarter of the population was still living below the absolute poverty rate. Georgia's ranking in the Corruption Perceptions Index by Transparency International improved dramatically from rank 133 in 2004 to 67 in 2008 and further to 51 in 2012, surpassing several EU countries. The World Bank ranked the country 8th in terms of ease of doing business and named it as the leading economic reformer in the world. The Abkhaz–Georgian and Georgian-Ossetian conflicts continued during Saakashvili's presidency and saw a major escalation in 2008, which saw Russia officially announcing its support for separatists in Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Saakashvili led Georgia through the 2008 Russo-Georgian War, which ended after five days of fighting by a ceasefire agreement negotiated by the French president Nicolas Sarkozy. The war resulted in Georgia losing all of its possessions in the disputed territories. Russia subsequently recognized the independence of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, while Georgia responded with breaking diplomatic relations.

On the economic front, Saakashvili pursued a neoliberal policy: abolition of the minimum wage, dismissal of 60,000 civil servants, lowering of corporate income tax from 20% to 15%, and dividend tax from 10% to 5%. In 2009, Forbes ranked Georgia as the fourth country with the lowest tax burden in the world.[12]

During Saakashvili's tenure, Georgia went through several political crises. In 2007, mass demonstrations erupted demanding resignation of Saakashvili. The protests, which were triggered by detention of Georgian politician Irakli Okruashvili, were violently dispersed by the special forces on 7 November 2007. The largest opposition media Imedi TV was raided by the police and transformed into a pro-government channel. Another wave of protests erupted in 2009. In May 2011, the government again violently responded to the opposition protests staged by Saakashvili's former ally Nino Burjanadze. Saakashvili was embroiled in a number of scandals, the most important ones relating to the beating of the opposition politician Valery Gelashvili and the murder of Sandro Girgvliani. In September 2012, the leaked video footage of systemic torture and rape in the Georgian prison system came to light during the Gldani prison scandal. Saakashvili was accused of being behind police brutality and the inhuman treatment of inmates.

Shortly after the 2013 presidential election, Saakashvili left Georgia.[13] In 2014, the Prosecutor's Office of Georgia filed criminal charges against Saakashvili. In 2018, the Tbilisi City Court sentenced him in absentia to six years in prison for ordering the beating of Valeri Gelashvili and pardoning in prior agreement the individuals tried for Sandro Girgvliani's murder.[11] Saakashvili continued to manage his party from abroad while accusing the Georgian government of using the legal system as a tool of political retribution.

Saakashvili supported Ukraine's Euromaidan movement and the Revolution of Dignity.[14] On 30 May 2015, Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko appointed Saakashvili as Governor of Odesa Oblast.[15][16][17] He was also granted Ukrainian citizenship,[15] and due to restrictions on dual nationality under Georgian law, was stripped of his Georgian citizenship.[18] On 7 November 2016, Saakashvili resigned as governor while blaming President Poroshenko personally for enabling corruption in Odesa and in Ukraine overall.[9] Four days later, he announced his goal to create a new political party called Movement of New Forces.[19][20]

On 26 July 2017, Saakashvili (at the time staying in the US) was stripped of his Ukrainian citizenship by Petro Poroshenko, and became a stateless person.[21][22] He reentered Ukraine with a group of supporters through Poland but was arrested in February 2018 and deported. Saakashvili moved to the Netherlands, where he was granted permanent residency. On 29 May 2019, he returned to Ukraine after newly elected President Volodymyr Zelenskyy restored his citizenship.[23][24] On 1 October 2021, Saakashvili announced via Facebook his return to Georgia after an eight-year absence, on the eve of the local elections.[25][26] Later on the same day Prime Minister of Georgia Irakli Garibashvili held a press briefing announcing that Saakashvili had been arrested in Tbilisi.[27] According to the investigation, Saakashvili entered the country secretly, hiding in a semi-trailer truck loaded with milk products. He illegally crossed the state border of Georgia, bypassing the customs control.[28] He was placed in the No. 12 penitentiary facility in Rustavi. President of Georgia Salome Zourabichvili stated that she would "never" pardon Saakashvili. He has been transferred to hospital numerous times due to his health condition and since May 2022 he is being treated in a civilian clinic in Tbilisi.[29]

Early life and education edit

Saakashvili was born to a Georgian family in Tbilisi on 21 December 1967, capital of the then Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic in the Soviet Union.[30][31] His father, Nikoloz Saakashvili, is a physician who practises medicine in Tbilisi and directs a local balneological centre. His mother, Giuli Alasania, is a historian who lectures at Tbilisi State University.

During university, he served his shortened military service in 1989–1990 with the Soviet Border Troops' checkpoint unit in the Boryspil Airport in Ukraine (then as Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic, also a part of the Soviet Union). Saakashvili graduated from the Institute of International Relations (Department of International Law) of the Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv (in then independent Ukraine) in 1992. At this university, he was friends with later President of Ukraine Petro Poroshenko.[32] While in Ukraine Saakashvili participated in the October 1990 student protest known as the "Revolution on Granite".[33]

Saakashvili briefly worked as a human rights officer for the interim State Council of Georgia following the overthrow of President Zviad Gamsakhurdia before receiving a fellowship from the United States State Department (via the Edmund S. Muskie Graduate Fellowship Program). He received an LL.M. from Columbia Law School in 1994 and took classes at the School of International and Public Affairs and The George Washington University Law School the following year. In 1993, he also received a diploma from the International Institute of Human Rights in Strasbourg, France.[34]

Election to Georgian Parliament edit

Saakashvili interned at the United Nations.[35] After graduation, while on internship in the New York law firm of Patterson Belknap Webb & Tyler in early 1995, he was approached by Zurab Zhvania, an old friend from Georgia who was working on behalf of President Eduard Shevardnadze to enter politics. He stood in the December 1995 elections along with Zhvania, and both men won seats in parliament, standing for the Union of Citizens of Georgia, Shevardnadze's party.

Saakashvili was chairman of the parliamentary committee which was in charge of creating a new electoral system, an independent judiciary and a non-political police force. Opinion surveys recognised him to be the second most popular person in Georgia, behind Shevardnadze. He was named "man of the year"[dubious ] by a panel of journalists and human rights advocates in 1997. In January 2000, Saakashvili was appointed vice-president of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe.

On 12 October 2000, Saakashvili became Minister of Justice for the government of President Shevardnadze. He initiated major reforms in the Georgian criminal justice and prisons system. This earned praise[dubious ] from international observers and human rights activists.[citation needed] But, in mid-2001, he became involved in a major controversy with the State Security Minister Vakhtang Kutateladze and Tbilisi police chief Ioseb Alavidze, accusing them of profiting from corrupt business deals.

Saakashvili resigned on 5 September 2001, saying that "I consider it immoral for me to remain as a member of Shevardnadze's government." He declared that corruption had penetrated to the very centre of the Georgian government and that Shevardnadze lacked the will to deal with it, warning that "current developments in Georgia will turn the country into a criminal enclave in one or two years."

In the United National Movement edit

Having resigned from the government and quit the Shevardnadze-run Union of Citizens of Georgia party, Saakashvili founded the United National Movement (UNM) in October 2001, a centre-right political party with a touch of nationalism, to provide a focus for part of the Georgian reformists leaders. In June 2002, he was elected as the Chairman of the Tbilisi Assembly ("Sakrebulo") following an agreement between the United National Movement and the Georgian Labour Party. This gave him a powerful new platform from which to criticize the government.

Georgia held parliamentary elections on 2 November 2003 which were denounced by local and international observers as being grossly rigged. Saakashvilli claimed that he had won the elections (a claim supported by independent exit polls), and urged Georgians to demonstrate against Shevardnadze's government and engage in nonviolent civil disobedience against the authorities. Saakashvili's UNM and Burdjanadze-Democrats united to demand the ouster of Shevardnadze and the rerun of the elections.

Massive political demonstrations were held in Tbilisi in November, with over 100,000 people participating and listening to speeches by Saakashvili and other opposition figures. The Kmara ("Enough!") youth organization (a Georgian counterpart of the Serbian "Otpor!") and several NGOs, like Liberty Institute, were active in all protest activities. After an increasingly tense two weeks of demonstrations, Shevardnadze resigned as president on 23 November, to be replaced on an interim basis by parliamentary speaker Nino Burjanadze. While the revolutionary leaders did their best to stay within the constitutional norms, many called the change of government a popular coup dubbed by Georgian media as the Rose Revolution.

Saakashvili's "storming of Georgia's parliament" in 2003 "put U.S. diplomats off guard... [Saakashvili] ousted a leader the U.S. had long backed, Eduard Shevardnadze."[36] Seeking support, Saakashvili went outside the U.S. State Department. He hired Randy Scheunemann, then Sen. John McCain's top foreign-policy adviser, as a lobbyist and used Daniel Kunin of USAID and the NDI as a full-time adviser.[36]

On 24 February 2004, the United National Movement and the United Democrats had amalgamated. The new political movement was named the National Movement - Democrats (NMD). The movement's main political priorities include raising pensions and providing social services to the poor, its main base of support; fighting corruption; and increasing state revenue.

First presidency edit

 
Saakashvili's inauguration as president of Georgia
 
Presidents Saakashvili and George W. Bush in Tbilisi on 10 May 2005

The 2004 presidential election were carried out on 4 January 2004. The election was an outcome of the bloodless Rose Revolution and a consequent resignation of President Eduard Shevardnadze. It is well known for a very high level of electoral turnout and also for the number of votes cast for one particular presidential candidate – Mikheil Saakashvili (96%). All other candidates received less than 2% of the votes. In total, 1,763,000 eligible voters participated in the election.

On 4 January 2004, Saakashvili won the presidential elections in Georgia with more than 96% of the votes cast, making him at 36 years old, the youngest national president in Europe at the time. On a platform of opposing corruption and improving pay and pensions, he promised to improve relations with the outside world. Although he is strongly pro-Western and intended to seek Georgian membership of NATO and the European Union, he had also spoken of the importance of better relations with Russia. He faced major problems, however, particularly Georgia's difficult economic situation and the still unresolved question of separatism in the regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Abkhazia regards itself as independent of Georgia and did not take part in the elections, while South Ossetia favours union with its northern counterpart in Russia.

Saakashvili was sworn in as president in Tbilisi on 25 January 2004. Immediately after the ceremony he signed a decree establishing a new state flag. On 26 January, in a ceremony held at the Tbilisi Kashueti Church of Saint George, he promulgated a decree granting permission for the return of the body of the first president of Georgia, Zviad Gamsakhurdia, from Grozny (Chechen Republic) to Tbilisi and renaming a major road in the capital after Gamsakhurdia. He also released 32 Gamsakhurdia supporters (political prisoners) imprisoned by the Shevardnadze government in 1993–94. As well as a new national flag, Saakashivili authorised the adoption of a new national anthem on 20 May 2004 and the establishment of a new state arms on 1 October 2004.

 
Anti-Saakashvili poster in Tbilisi, 2006

In the first months of his presidency, Saakashvili faced a major political crisis in the southwestern Autonomous Republic of Adjara run by an authoritarian regional leader, Aslan Abashidze, who largely ignored the central Georgian government and was viewed by many as a pro-Russian politician. The crisis threatened to develop into an armed confrontation, but Saakashvili's government managed to resolve the conflict peacefully, forcing Abashidze to resign on 6 May 2004. Success in Adjara encouraged the new president to intensify his efforts towards bringing the breakaway South Ossetia back under the Georgian jurisdiction. The separatist authorities responded with intense militarization in the region, that led to armed clashes in August 2004. A stalemate ensued, and despite a peace plan proposed by the Georgian government in 2005, the conflict remains unresolved. In late July 2006, Saakashvili's government dealt successfully with another major crisis, this time in Abkhazia's Kodori Gorge where Georgia's police forces disarmed a defiant militia led by a local warlord Emzar Kvitsiani.

In his foreign policy, Saakashvili maintained close ties with the US, as well as other NATO countries, and remains one of the key partners of the GUAM organization. The Saakashvili-led Rose Revolution has been described by the White House as one of the most powerful movements in the modern history[37] that has inspired others to seek freedom.[38]

Economic and government reforms edit

At the time Saakashvili took office, Georgia suffered from a stagnant economy, widespread corruption by police and state officials to the point where bribery was needed for any kind of commercial transaction, high crime rates, and severe infrastructure problems, including widespread power outages, and schools and medical facilities falling into disrepair.[39] Saakashvili set out on a massive reform programme. He systematically fired politicians, public officials, and police officers suspected of corruption and significantly raised the salaries of state employees to the point where they could depend on their salaries rather than bribes for a living. Many oligarchs who had dominated the economy were arrested, with most agreeing to pay massive fines into the state budget in exchange for their freedom. Saakashvili reformed the economy by cutting red tape which had made business difficult, courting foreign investment, simplifying the tax code, launching a privatization campaign, and tackling widespread tax evasion. Due to the establishment of a functioning taxation and customs infrastructure, the state budget increased by 300% within three years. The government massively upgraded infrastructure and public services. In particular, water and power infrastructure was improved to the point where it functioned effectively, schools and hospitals were renovated, more roads were laid, and new housing developments were built.[40][41][42][43][44][45]

As a result, the rate of corruption in the country was drastically reduced and the business environment was improved significantly. The economy began growing and the standard of living rose. Georgia's ranking in the Corruption Perceptions Index by Transparency International improved dramatically from rank 133[46] in 2004 to 67 in 2008[47] and further to 51 in 2012, surpassing several EU countries.[48][49] The World Bank named Georgia as the leading economic reformer in the world, and the country ranked 8th in terms of ease of doing business- while most of the country's neighbours are ranked somewhere in the hundreds.[50] The World Bank noted a significant improvement in living conditions in Georgia, reporting that "Georgia's transformation since 2003 has been remarkable. The lights are on, the streets are safe, and public services are corruption free."[42] Doing Business report founder Simeon Dyankov has given Georgia as an example to other reformers during the annual Reformer Awards.

Under Saakashvili's term, Georgia became involved in international market transactions to a small extent, and in 2007 Bank of Georgia sold bonds at premium, when $200m five-year bond was priced with a coupon of 9 per cent at par, or 100 per cent of face value, after initially being priced at 9.5 per cent and investors pushed orders up to $600m.[51]

In 2009, he introduced The Economic Liberty Act of Georgia, which was adopted by the Parliament of Georgia in 2011. The Act restricted the state's ability to interfere in the economy, and was aimed at reducing the state expenses and debt by 30% and 60%, respectively. It also explicitly prohibited the Government from changing taxes without a popular referendum on rates and structure.

Due to his government's economic reforms, Georgia's economy grew 70% between 2003 and 2013, and per capita income roughly tripled.[52] However, poverty only marginally declined. At the end of his second term, about a quarter of the population was still poor, and unemployment was at 15%.[40]

Law and order edit

On 27 March 2006, the government announced that it had prevented a nationwide prison riot plotted by criminal kingpins. The police operation ended with the deaths of 7 inmates and at least 17 injuries. While the opposition cast doubts over the official version and demanded an independent investigation, the ruling party was able to vote down such initiatives.[53]

Despite this, Saakashvili's government also eased the legal system in some respects. His government decriminalized libel and pushed through legislation upholding freedom of speech, although he was accused of stifling the media and using the judicial system to go after his political opponents in spite of this. In December 2006, Saakashvili signed a constitutional amendment completely abolishing the death penalty in law.[40][54]

Military reforms edit

Saakashvili's government massively increased military spending to modernize the Georgian Armed Forces, which were small and poorly equipped and trained at the time he entered office. By 2007, the military budget had increased twenty-fold since 1999. New weapons and vehicles were purchased, military salaries were raised, new bases were built, and Georgian soldiers engaged in joint training exercises with the US military.[43][55]

Education reform edit

When Saakashvili took office, the university entrance system was bribe-based, with a university spot costing up to $50,000 in 2003. His government introduced a common entrance exam, replacing the bribe-based system with a merit-based one. The quality of university education also improved. Despite this, Saakashvili was accused of failing to reform the quality of primary and secondary-level school education, which reportedly remained low at the end of his term in office.[40][42]

Health reforms edit

After Georgian independence, the government found that its Soviet-style centralized healthcare system was underfunded and failing. State-run centralized medical facilities were typically inefficient and in need of renovation and technological upgrades. As a result, the government privatized almost all public hospitals and clinics, and the insurance system was deregulated, with private insurance companies able to offer coverage. Only a few specialized facilities for mental health and infectious diseases remained in government hands, and the state continued to provide health insurance for those below the poverty line, whose insurance was paid for by public funds and provided by private insurers, and some civil servants, amounting to about 40% of the population. As a result, the level of healthcare greatly improved, with new hospitals and clinics beginning to replace older facilities. However, a portion of the population was left uninsured, as it could not afford private insurance and did not qualify for public insurance.[56][57]

Foreign relations edit

 
U.S. President George W. Bush and Saakashvili meet in Tbilisi on May 10, 2005.
 
Mikheil Saakashvili with President of Poland Lech Kaczyński in 2007
 
Mikheil Saakashvili with U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in 2010

Saakashvili sees membership of the NATO as a premise of stability for Georgia and offered an intensified dialogue with the de facto Abkhaz and Ossetian authorities. Until the 2008 South Ossetia war, a diplomatic solution was thought to be possible. Saakashvili's administration doubled the number of its troops in Iraq, making Georgia one of the biggest supporters of Coalition Forces, and keeping its troops in Kosovo and Afghanistan to "contribute to what it describes as global security".[58]

Saakashvili's government maintained diplomatic relations with other Caucasian states and Eastern European countries with Western orientation, such as Armenia, Azerbaijan, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania, Turkey and Ukraine. In 2004, Saakashvili visited Israel to attend the official opening of the Modern Energy Problems Research Center, and Dr. Brenda Schaffer, the director of the centre, described Saakashvili as the Nelson Mandela of the 21st century.[59] In August of the same year, Saakashvili, who holds an honorary doctorate from the University of Haifa, travelled to Israel to attend the opening of the official Week of Georgian-Jewish Friendship, held under the auspices of the Georgian president, for which the Jewish leaders were invited as honoured guests.[59]

Relations with the United States were good, but were complicated by Saakashvili's "volatile" behaviour. Former and current US officials characterized the Georgian president as "difficult to manage". They criticized his "risky moves", moves that have often "caught the U.S. unprepared" while leaving it "exposed diplomatically".[36]

Saakashvili's ties with the US go back to 1991 (see Early life and career). Biographies of Thomas Jefferson and John F. Kennedy can be found in his office, next to biographies of Joseph Stalin and Mustafa Kemal Atatürk and books on war. Seeking US support, Saakashvili went outside the United States Department of State and established contacts with Sen. John McCain and forces seeking NATO expansion.[36]

Saakashvili believes that the long-term priority for the country is to advance its membership in the European Community and during a meeting with Javier Solana, he said that in contrast with new and old European states, Georgia is an Ancient European state.

Assassination attempt edit

On 10 May 2005, while U.S. President George W. Bush was giving a speech in Tbilisi's Freedom Square, Vladimir Arutyunian threw a live hand grenade at where Saakashvili and Bush were sitting. It landed in the crowd about 20 metres (65 ft) from the podium after hitting a girl and did not detonate. Arutyunian was arrested in July of that year, but before his capture, he managed to kill one law enforcement agent. He was convicted of the attempted assassinations of Saakashvili and Bush and the murder of the agent, and given a life sentence.[60]

2007 crisis edit

 
Saakashvili at the 2007 European People's Party Summit in Lisbon.

The late Georgian businessman Badri Patarkatsishvili claimed that pressure had been exerted on his financial interests after Imedi Television broadcast several accusations against officials. On 25 October 2007, former defence minister Irakli Okruashvili accused the president of planning Patarkatsishvili's murder.[61][62][63] Okruashvili was detained two days later on charges of extortion, money laundering, and abuse of office.[64] However, in a videotaped confession released by the General Prosecutor's Office on 8 October 2007, in which Okruashvili pleaded guilty to large-scale bribery through extortion and negligence while serving as minister, he retracted his accusations against the president and said that he did so to gain some political benefit and that Badri Patarkatsishvili told him to do so.[65] Okruashvili's lawyer and other opposition leaders said his retraction had been made under duress.[66]

Georgia faced the worst crisis since the Rose Revolution. A series of anti-government demonstration were sparked, in October, by accusations of murders and corruption levelled by Irakli Okruashvili, Saakashvili's erstwhile associate and former member of his government, against the president and his allies. The protests climaxed early in November 2007, and involved several opposition groups and the influential media tycoon Badri Patarkatsishvili. Although the demonstrations rapidly went downhill, the government's decision to use police force against the remaining protesters evolved into clashes in the streets of Tbilisi on 7 November. The declaration of state of emergency by the president (7–16 November) and the restriction imposed on some mass media sources led to harsh criticism of the Saakashvili government both in the country and abroad. Human Rights Watch criticized the Georgian government for using "excessive" force against protesters in November and International Crisis Group warned of growing authoritarianism.[67]

Patarkatsishvili's opposition television station Imedi was shut down in November 2007 after the authorities accused it of complicity with the plot to overthrow the elected government. The channel resumed broadcasts a few weeks after the incident, but did not cover news or talk shows until after the election.[68] Subsequently, the station was sold to supporters of the Saakashvili government[69] and some Georgian journalists have called for the station to be handed back.[70]

On 8 November 2007, President Saakashvili announced a compromise solution to hold early presidential elections for 5 January 2008. He also proposed to hold a plebiscite in parallel to snap presidential elections about when to hold parliamentary polls – in spring as pushed for by the opposition parties, or in late 2008. Several concessions in the election code were also made to the opposition.[71]

On 23 November 2007, the ruling United National Movement party officially nominated Saakashvili as its candidate for the upcoming elections. Pursuant to the Constitution of Georgia, Saakashvili resigned on 25 November to launch his pre-election campaign for early presidential polls.[72]

Second presidency edit

 
Graffiti in Tbilisi

2008 presidential election edit

 
Saakashvili in 2008

On 5 January 2008, an early presidential election was held nationwide, with the exception of the highland village of Shatili, where the polling station was not opened due to high levels of snowfall. In a televised address, President Saakashvili had proposed to hold the election earlier than called for by the Georgian constitution in order to resolve the political tension surrounding opposition-led demonstrations, their suppression by the government on 7 November 2007, and the closure of the most popular opposition television network, Imedi. Saakashvili said in his presidential address that "these elections will be held according to our timing, and not that of our ill-wishers."

Changes in the Cabinet edit

Saakashvili publicly announced his plans of modernising the Cabinet of Georgia well before Georgian presidential elections. Shortly after being re-elected, the president formally re-appointed the Prime Minister of Georgia Lado Gurgenidze and asked him to present a renewed cabinet to the Parliament of Georgia for final approval.

Gurgenidze changed most ministers, leaving Ivane Merabishvili, controversial Minister for Home Affairs, Defence Minister Davit Kezerashvili and Minister of Finance Nika Gilauri on their former positions. Gia Nodia was appointed as the Minister of Education and Science. Zaza Gamcemlidze, former director of Tbilisi Botanic Garden, took over the position of the Minister of Natural Resources and Nature Protection. Famous archaeologist, and already the eldest minister in the cabinet, Iulon Gagoshidze was appointed on a newly designated position of the Minister of State for Diasporas.

Parliamentary elections held during Saakashvili's second term were condemned by the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe election monitoring mission for being marred by ballot stuffing, violence against opposition campaigners, uncritical coverage of the president and his party from the state-controlled media, and public officials openly campaigning for the president's party.[73]

On 28 October 2008, Saakashvili proposed Grigol Mgaloblishvili, Georgian ambassador to Turkey for the premiership. According to the President, Gurgenidze had initially agreed to serve only for a year and that Georgia was facing new challenges which needed new approach. The Parliament of Georgia approved Mgaloblishvili as the premier on 1 November 2008.

Demonstrations against Saakashvili spread across Georgia in 2009, 2011 and 2012.

Russo-Georgian War edit

 
Meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin, 22 February 2008

On 22 February 2008, Saakashvili held an official meeting with the President of Russia Vladimir Putin, in his residence in Novo-Ogaryovo. The presidents discussed the issues of aviation regulations between the two countries.[74] This was Putin's last meeting in his second term as the President of Russia, being succeeded by Dimitry Medvedev shortly thereafter.

However, after a series of clashes between Georgians and South Ossetians, Russian military forces intervened on the side of the South Ossetian separatists in response to the Georgian attack on Tskhinvali and invaded Gori in Shida Kartli. The two counterparts were led to a ceasefire agreement and a six-point peace plan, due to the French President's mediation. On 26 August 2008, the Russian president, Dmitry Medvedev, signed a decree recognizing Abkhazia and South Ossetia as independent states. Also on 26 August, in response to Russia's recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, Deputy Foreign Minister Grigol Vashadze announced that Georgia had broken diplomatic relations with Russia.

Medvedev held Saakashvili responsible for the Russo-Georgian War, and states that Saakashvili is responsible for the collapse of the Georgian state.[75]

The Georgian military's capabilities were severely damaged by the war, and Saakashvili's government moved to rebuild them, massively increasing military spending. By late 2010, the Georgian military reached a strength greater than that of pre-war levels, after which military spending declined again. Although the Georgian government bought large amounts of arms and military equipment from abroad, it also began to seriously invest in an indigenous military industry. Starting in 2010, Georgia began to manufacture its own line of armoured vehicles, artillery systems, small arms, and unmanned aerial vehicles.[76]

2009 opposition demonstrations and armed mutiny edit

The pressure against Saakashvili intensified in 2009, when the opposition launched mass demonstrations against Saakashvili's rule. On 5 May 2009, Georgian police said large-scale disorders were planned in Georgia of which the failed army mutiny was part. According to the police, Saakashvili's assassination had also been plotted.[77] Opposition figures dispute the claim of an attempted mutiny and instead say that troops refused an illegal order to use force against opposition demonstrators.[78]

End of presidency edit

 
Mikheil Saakashvili (2013)

On 2 October 2012, Saakashvili admitted defeat in Georgia's parliamentary election against Bidzina Ivanishvili in the election the day before.[79] He was barred from seeking a third term in the 2013 presidential election. Saakashvili left Georgia shortly after the election.[13]

In December 2013, Saakashvili accepted the position of lecturer and senior statesman at Tufts University in the United States.[80]

Legal prosecution (in Georgia) since the end of presidency edit

On 23 March 2014, when Saakashvili was summoned to give testimony to the main prosecutor's office of Georgia, the office planned to interrogate him about the pardoning in 2008 of four high-ranking officials of the Department of Constitutional Security of the Georgian Ministry of Internal Affairs – Gia Alania, Avtandil Aptsiauri, Alexander Gachava and Mikhail Bibiluridze, who were convicted for causing the death of bank employee Sandro Girgvliani on 28 January 2006, as well as for unlawful actions against his friend Levan Bukhaidze. He was also to be questioned as a witness for nine criminal cases, including the death of the Prime Minister of Georgia Zurab Zhvania in 2005.[81]

On 28 July 2014, criminal charges were filed by the Georgian prosecutor's office against Saakashvili over allegedly "exceeding official powers" during the 2007 Georgian demonstrations, as well as a police raid on and "seizure" of Imedi TV and other assets owned by the late tycoon Badri Patarkatsishvili. Saakashvili, then in Hungary, responded by accusing the Georgian authorities of political score-settling and attempts at appeasing Russia.[82] The United States expressed concerns over the case and warned that "the legal system should not be used as a tool of political retribution".[83] The European Union stated that it took "note with concern" and it will "closely monitor these and other legal proceedings against members of the former government and current opposition in Georgia".[84]

On 2 August 2014, Tbilisi City Court ordered pre-trial detention in absentia for Saakashvili and the co-accused Zurab Adeishvili (chief prosecutor in 2007) and Davit Kezerashvili (defense minister in 2007), with a preliminary hearing appointed for September 2014.[85]

On 13 August 2014, Saakashvili was charged with embezzling budget funds.[86] On 14 August, an internal search was declared, and on 31 August, the procedure for declaring an international search was launched.[87] On 1 August 2015, Interpol refused to declare Saakashvili on the international wanted list, as the Georgian authorities demanded.[88] In September, the property of the Saakashvili family was seized. His personal bank accounts in Georgia were also seized.

In March 2015, Ukraine denied a Georgian request to extradite Saakashvili, as it deemed the criminal cases against him politically motivated.[89]

Saakashvili stated on 1 June 2015 that he had given up (three days before) Georgian citizenship to avoid "guaranteed imprisonment" in Georgia.[13] The Constitution of Ukraine forbids the extradition of Ukrainians to other states.[90]

On 8 August 2017, the Georgian General Prosecutor's Office claimed Saakashvili would face up to 11 years of imprisonment (charges included the spending of public funding on personal needs, abuse of power during the dispersal of a demonstration on 7 November 2007, the beating of former MP Valery Gelashvili and the raid of Imedi TV).[91] On 18 August 2017, Georgia requested Ukraine to extradite Saakashvili. On 5 September, the Ukrainian authorities confirmed that they had received the request from Georgia.[92]

On 5 January 2018, the Tbilisi City Court sentenced Saakashvili to three-year imprisonment in absentia for abusing power in pardoning the former Interior Ministry officials convicted in the 2006 Sandro Girgvliani murder case. On 28 June 2018, the Tbilisi City Court found Saakashvili guilty of abusing his authority as president by trying to cover up evidence related to the 2005 beating of opposition lawmaker Valery Gelashvili and sentenced him in absentia to six years in prison. Saakashvili and his supporters denounced the verdict as politically motivated.[93]

After returning to Georgia in 2021, Saakashvili was additionally charged for illegal border crossing.[94]

Ukraine edit

Saakashvili energetically supported Ukraine's Euromaidan movement and its Revolution of Dignity.[14] On 7 March 2014, Saakashvili authored an op-ed piece entitled "When Putin invaded my country", in the context of the turmoil in Ukraine after the ouster on 22 February of President Viktor Yanukovych and before the 16 March referendum in the 2014 Crimean crisis.[95]

In November 2013, Saakashvili moved to Williamsburg, Brooklyn, New York.[96]

Governor of Odesa edit

On 13 February 2015, Saakashvili was appointed by the president of Ukraine, Petro Poroshenko, as head of the International Advisory Council on Reforms—an advisory body whose main task is working out proposals and recommendations for implementation and introduction of reforms in Ukraine based on best international practices.[97] On 30 May 2015, Poroshenko appointed Saakashvili Governor of Odesa Oblast (region).[15] On the previous day, 29 May 2015, he was granted Ukrainian citizenship.[15][98] A month before this appointment, Saakashvili had stated that he had turned down the post of First Vice Prime Minister of Ukraine because in order to fulfill that post, he would have had to become a Ukrainian citizen and renounce his Georgian citizenship.[14] Saakashvili stated on 1 June 2015 that he had now changed his mind to avoid "guaranteed imprisonment" in Georgia and to defend Georgian interest through his governorship in Odesa.[13] Also on 1 June, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Georgia stated that the appointment of Saakashvili would not have a negative impact on the relations between Georgia and Ukraine.[99] But in reality, after this appointment, relations between the two countries soured.[100] On 4 December 2015, Saakashvili was stripped of his Georgian citizenship due to restrictions on dual nationality under Georgian law.[101] Saakashvili claimed that this was done to prevent him from leading the United National Movement in the 2016 Georgian parliamentary election.[101]

A poll by Sociological group "RATING" showed that in October 2015, Saakashvili was the most popular politician in Ukraine (43% viewed him positively).[102]

In December 2015, Saakashvili started an anti-corruption NGO Movement for Purification.[103] Among rumours that this NGO would be transformed into a political force, Saakashvili stated he did not have the intention to create a new political party.[103] In the autumn of 2015, informal attempts and negotiations were launched to form a political party around Saakashvili with members of the parliamentary group Interfactional Union "Eurooptimists", Democratic Alliance and possibly Self Reliance, but this project collapsed in June 2016.[104]

Saakashvili submitted his resignation as governor on 7 November 2016[105] citing corruption in Ukraine as a main reason.[9] In a press conference this same day, he claimed that President Poroshenko personally supported "corruption clans in the Odesa region" and that the "Odesa region is being handed over not only to corrupt people, but also to enemies of Ukraine."[9][106][nb 1] On 9 November 2016, President Poroshenko accepted Saakashvili's resignation (as governor) and dismissed him as his freelance adviser.[1]

Movement of New Forces edit

 
Saakashvili-led protesters demand Petro Poroshenko's impeachment, Kyiv, 3 December 2017

On 11 November 2016, Saakashvili announced his goal to create a new political party called "Movement of New Forces"[19] and that "our goal is early parliamentary elections to be carried out as quickly as possible in the shortest possible time."[20] In late February 2017, the Ministry of Justice of Ukraine registered Movement of New Forces officially as a political party.[107]

According to a poll by Sociological group "RATING", 18% viewed Saakashvili positively in April 2017.[108]

In Ukraine, only Ukrainian citizens can lead political parties or be elected to its parliament.[109]

Stripping of Ukrainian citizenship edit

On 26 July 2017, President Poroshenko issued a decree[nb 2] stripping Saakashvili of his Ukrainian citizenship, but without a reason for his doing so being stated. Ukraine's migration service said in a statement that "according to the Constitution of Ukraine, the president takes decisions on who is stripped of Ukrainian citizenship based on the conclusions of the citizenship commission". Saakashvili, in response to his being stripped of citizenship, replied: "I have only one citizenship, that of Ukraine, and I will not be deprived of it! Now there is an attempt under way to force me to become a refugee. This will not happen! I will fight for my legal right to return to Ukraine!" A Ukrainian legislator from the Petro Poroshenko Bloc faction in parliament, Serhiy Leshchenko, said that Saakashvili was (when Poroshenko issued his decree) in the United States, but that if he sought to return to Ukraine, he would face extradition to Georgia to face charges for alleged crimes that occurred during his presidency there.[21][111] According to The Economist, most observers saw Poroshenko's stripping Saakashvili of his citizenship "simply as the sidelining of a political rival" (at the time political polls gave Saakashvili's political party Movement of New Forces around 2% in a hypothetical early election).[112] On 28 July 2017, Saakashvili told Newshour he wanted to return to Ukraine to "get rid of the old corrupt elite" there.[113]

On 4 August, Saakashvili appeared in Poland;[nb 3] he left the country 4 days later travelling to Lithuania claiming "I'll be travelling across Europe."[115][116] Saakashvili announced on 16 August that he will return to Ukraine on 10 September (2017) through the Krakovets checkpoint and urged people to meet him at the checkpoint.[117][118]

On 10 September, the train on which Saakashvili tried to enter Ukraine was held at a railway station in Przemysl, Poland. Then, on the same day, he travelled by bus to the Medyka-Shehyni border crossing, where he was allowed to pass through a Polish checkpoint on the border with Ukraine, but then temporarily blocked from reaching the Ukrainian checkpoint by a line of border guards standing arm-in-arm. Finally, a crowd broke through from the Ukrainian side and took Saakashvili into Ukraine.[119][120][121][122] On 12 September, in the Leopolis Hotel in Lviv, the State Border Guard Service of Ukraine acquainted Saakashvili with the protocol on the administrative violation of "Illegal crossing or attempted illegal crossing of the state border of Ukraine."[123]

At a rally in the western Ukrainian city of Chernivtsi on 13 September, Saakashvili announced that he would return to Kyiv on 19 September after travelling to several other cities to rally support.[124]

On 22 September, the Mostysky District Court of the Lviv region found Saakashvili guilty of illegally crossing the state border. Under the court's decision, he must pay a fine of 200 non-taxable minimums (3400 hryvni).[125]

In the first half of 2017, and in December 2018 and January 2019, Saakashvili hosted political talk shows on the TV channel "Zik".[126] Saakashvili claims his programme was axed in 2019 because his view on Yulia Tymoshenko's candidacy for the 2019 Ukrainian presidential election was distorted (he claimed to support her candidacy while his TV show suggested the exact opposite).[126]

Legal prosecution (in Ukraine) edit

On 5 December 2017, Saakashvili (who was leading anti-government protests at the time)[127] was temporarily detained by Ukraine's Security Service on the roof of his apartment building in central Kyiv and his apartment was searched.[128] He was freed from police by a large group of protesters. Saakashvili's lawyer reported that the politician had been detained for attempting to overthrow Ukraine's constitutional system,[129] whilst the SBU accused Saakashvili of receiving financing from a "criminal group" linked to ousted (during the Revolution of Dignity) Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych.[130] On 8 December, General Prosecutor of Ukraine Yuriy Lutsenko announced that National Police officers had found the location of Saakashvili, detained him and placed him in a temporary detention centre.[130][131] The following day, Saakashvili began an indefinite hunger strike, claiming to oppose any attempts at compulsory feeding.[132] On 11 December, a Ukrainian court released him from detention.[133]

On 12 February 2018, Saakashvili was deported to Poland. The Ukrainian border service stated "This person was on Ukrainian territory illegally and therefore, in compliance with all legal procedures, he was returned to the country from where he arrived". Saakashvili was subsequently banned from entering Ukraine until 2021 by the Ukrainian border service.[134] Saakashvili claimed that his Georgian bodyguards and supporters had in recent months been kidnapped, tortured and deported to Georgia.[135] On 14 February 2018, Saakashvili showed up in the Netherlands, having been granted permanent residency there on the basis of family reunification.[136]

Return to Ukraine edit

 
Mikheil Saakashvili (2019)

In May 2019, Ukraine's new president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, restored Saakashvili's Ukrainian citizenship.[137][nb 4] On 29 May 2019, Saakashvili returned to Ukraine; but he soon stated that he had no political ambitions in Ukraine.[139]

On 4 June, Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko offered Saakashvili to join the leadership of his UDAR party and to take part in the July 2019 early parliamentary elections. Saakashvili turned down the offer.[139] In these elections Saakashvili headed the party list of Movement of New Forces.[140] The party received 0.46% of the total votes and no seats.[141] Two days before the election, Saakashvili had called on his supporters to vote for the Servant of the People party at the election.[142] (Servant of the People won the election with 43.16% of the votes.)[141]

Saakashvili wrote on his Facebook page on 22 April 2020 that he had received a proposal from President Zelenskyy to become Vice Prime Minister of Ukraine for reforms in the Shmyhal Government.[7][143] Saakashvili told the Financial Times newspaper: "The president wants me to be in charge of talks with the IMF … I have experience."[144] The Ukrainian parliament did not consider the issue at its meetings on 24 and 30 April 2020.[145][nb 5] On 7 May 2020, President Zelenskyy appointed Saakashvili head of the executive committee of the National Reform Council [uk].[10]

Political activity in Georgia since the end of presidency edit

After stepping down as President in 2013, Saakashvili still remained an influential figure in Georgian politics. He continued to manage the United National Movement party from abroad, while accusing the Georgian government of using the legal system as a tool of political retribution.

Ahead of the 2016 Georgian parliamentary election, Saakashvili said that he was confident that "we [the United National Movement] are winning the election" and promised to return to Georgia and take part in forming a new government. Founder of the ruling Georgian Dream party Bidzina Ivanishvili accused Saakashvili of planning to stir disorders, which Saakashvili denied and in turn accused Ivanishvili of "blaming opponents for what he himself is planning".[147] On 26 September 2016, Saakashvili addressed his supporters at the United National Movement's campaign rally in Zugdidi via video link from Odesa, telling them that "the victory is inevitable". Saakashvili's wife Sandra Roelofs said that Saakashvili would return to Georgia to celebrate the victory. Meanwhile, members of the UNM-affiliated group, Free Zone, held press briefing in Tbilisi, accusing Saakashvili of instructing the leader of the organization Koba Khabazi to prepare for staging disorders. In response to allegations, the State Security Service of Georgia launched an investigation into charges of sabotage. Other members of the Free Zone distanced themselves from these claims and in turn accused the defecting group of being under influence of the State Security Service.[148]

On 27 September 2016, a recording was uploaded on YouTube, purportedly of a call between Mikheil Saakashvili and other UNM leaders discussing the need to pursue a "revolutionary scenario". The State Security Service launched an investigation into charges of "conspiracy to overthrow or to seize state power". Saakashvili denied the authenticity of the conversation and accused Bidzina Ivanishvili of trying to "avoid unavoidable defeat".[149]

On 4 October 2016, Saakashvili accused Ivanishvili of being behind the explosion of car belonging to United National Movement MP Givi Targamadze, alleging that Ivanishvili was trying to "get rid of" Targamadze because he "has been keeping active contacts with the law enforcement [officers], which scares Ivanishvili very much".[150]

On 5 October 2016, Saakashvili addressed his supporters via video link in Tbilisi, saying that three days were left before his return to Georgia.

After elections, Saakashvili said that they were held "with gross violations", calling his supporters to protest.[151] Saakashvili also expressed his support for boycotting the Parliament, a step which other leaders of the United National Movement described as a "suicide for the party". On 4 November, the UNM's political council rejected Saakashvili's calls to boycott. Saakashvili slammed the decision and said that he had no desire to maintain contact with "one or two whimsical persons" from UNM, accusing them of "prescribing defeat" for the party.[152] On 1 December, the political council voted to hold a congress in January to elect a new chairman.[153] Saakashvili lost his right to be UNM's chairman in June 2015, when he was deprived of Georgian citizenship because under Georgian legislation only Georgian citizens can chair political parties in Georgia. Since then, this position remained vacant. Some influential members of the party expressed support for further leaving the position vacant to avoid distancing the party from Mikheil Saakashvili and said that they would raise the issue on congress. Saakashvili supported the idea of holding congress, while some members of the party, under the leadership of Giga Bokeria and Davit Bakradze, accused Saakashvili of "hijacking" the congress organization in circumvention of the political council.[154][155]

On 12 January 2017, one week before the congress, the United National Movement officially announced splitting.[156] Members of the party who opposed boycotting the parliament and supported electing a new party chair opted to set up their own party. The breakaway entity took the largely unknown legal vehicle of a previous party European Georgia. A majority of the UNM's electoral list defected to European Georgia faction in the parliament, leaving the UNM with six members in parliament. Saakashvili thanked loyal members of the party for opposing efforts to "distance me from the party" and what he called "Ivanishvili's attempt to take over the United National Movement". He voiced the common belief among the UNM voters that these defections were encouraged by the ruling Georgian Dream Coalition in order to weaken its opposition. On 20 January, the UNM congress supported the proposal not to elect the party chairman until Mikheil Saakashvili would return to Georgia. The European Georgia members accused the UNM of "betraying the values of Rose Revolution" and turning to populism. In an interview with the online news website Netgazeti, Giorgi Ugulava distinguished the EG as being more liberal than the UNM, specifically describing the UNM as populist and communitarian.[157]

The UNM had no official chairman until 24 March 2019, when Saakashvili was succeeded as the UNM party's chairman by his own nominee, Grigol Vashadze.[158]

Return to Georgia edit

Prior to 2021 Georgian local elections, Saakashvili promised his supporters to return to Georgia.[159] Such promises were made by Saakashvili numerous times, including prior to 2016 Georgian parliamentary election and 2020 parliamentary election, thus they were not perceived seriously by some political actors. Many[who?] alleged that Saakashvili regularly made such announcements to remain relevant among his supporters and mobilize them to vote in the elections.[citation needed]

Nevertheless, Saakashvili's statements stirred significant controversy in Georgia, with high-ranking Georgian officials saying that Saakashvili would be arrested and sent to prison for his crimes. These statements were made on the basis of Tbilisi City Court decisions in 2018, which condemned Saakashvili for six years in prison for abuse of power, embezzlement and his role in the organization of a grievous bodily injury against an opposition lawmaker Valery Gelashvili. Saakashvili and his supporters denounced these verdicts as politically motivated.[93]

On 1 October 2021, Saakashvili claimed to have returned to Georgia after an eight-year absence, and called on his followers to march on the capital, Tbilisi.[25][26] He published a video on Facebook, claiming that he was in Batumi. The Georgian police, however, claimed that Saakashvili had not crossed the country's border.[26] Irakli Kobakhidze, chairman of the Georgian ruling party Georgian Dream, said that the video was "deepfake" and urged the voters to remain calm. Mamuka Mdinaradze, one of the leaders of Georgian Dream, claimed: "He [Saakashvili] is in Ukraine, we have specific information that this person did not leave Ukraine, did not go to another country, this person is in Ukraine, he is trapped somewhere in a hole, he hides from everyone to create the illusion that he is in Georgia".[160]

The video was shared and discussed on social media, before the story began to appear on Georgia's TV channels. For several hours, both pro-government and opposition TV channels actively engaged in the debate over Saakashvili's alleged homecoming video and whereabouts.[161] At the same time, pro-Saakashvili Mtavari Arkhi TV featured a news program titled "Saakashvili is in Georgia", while pro-government Imedi TV featured a news program titled "Saakashvili is in Ukraine". Georgia's Ministry of Internal Affairs reported that special forces were sent to Batumi in operation to detain Saakashvili.[162]

A few moments later, Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Gharibashvili announced at a briefing together with the Minister of Internal Affairs Vakhtang Gomelauri and the head of the State Security Service Grigol Liluashvili that Mikheil Saakashvili was under arrest.[27] Soon a video was published featuring handcuffed Saakashvili being taken into prison N12 in Rustavi. According to the investigation, Saakashvili entered the country secretly, hiding in a semi-trailer truck loaded with milk products. He illegally crossed the state border of Georgia, bypassing the customs control.[28] He was arrested in Tbilisi by the police and taken to the prison in Rustavi.[163]

President of Georgia Salome Zourabichvili stated that she would "never" pardon Saakashvili.[164] On 3 November 2021 Zourabichvili confirmed her first statement again.[165]

Saakashvili began a hunger strike in protest of what he considered as the state's refusal to give him a fair trial on charges which he thought would "destroy him and Georgia".[166] On 10 October 2021, his personal doctor asked authorities to move him to hospital as he continued with his hunger strike since his arrest and his health condition had allegedly worsened.[167]

On 14 October 2021, tens of thousands protested on Tbilisi's Rustaveli Avenue, demanding the release of Saakashvili from prison. Nika Melia, a leader of the United National Movement, came under criticism for ending a demonstration without presenting a plan of action or scheduling further protests, some even questioning his ability to lead the party and his loyalty to Saakashvili, pointing at the alleged internal power struggle within the party between Melia and Saakashvili. Melia responded to criticism by denying the existence of any conflict.[168]

Georgia's rights ombudsman stated that Saakashvili was not being given proper medical care and was being abused by fellow inmates.[169] The State Inspector's Service of Georgia launched a criminal investigation into alleged inhuman treatment of Mikheil Saakashvili.[170] Since 1 March 2022, the Special Investigation Service of Georgia has continued investigating instead of the State Inspector's Service.[171]

On 8 November 2021, Saakashvili was moved to Gldani penitentiary hospital. On 19 November 2021, Saakashvili was transferred to a Gori military hospital. Saakashvili's doctor Nokoloz Kipshidze and lawyer Nika Gvaramia stated that Saakashvili would end the 50-day hunger strike.[172][166]

On 12 December 2021, Otar Toidze, a doctor with Georgia's human rights commissioner said Saakashvili was in need of specialist treatment abroad.[173] On 29 December 2021, he was taken from hospital to prison of Rustavi, according to oppositional leaders and media his health conditions were still bad, and he was still continuing decreasing weight, according to his lawyer Nika Gvaramia.[174][175]

On 12 May 2022, Saakashvili was transferred to a civilian hospital in Tbilisi.[29]

On 1 December 2022, Saakashvili's lawyers appealed the court to either postpone Saakashvili's sentence or release him from prison on medical grounds.

On 24 January 2023, Saakashvili tested positive for COVID-19.[176]

On 1 February, Saakashvili testified before the court remotely.[177] He appeared to have lost a lot of weight, as evidenced by protruding ribs and stomach. According to his lawyer, Saakashvili, who is 195 cm in height, weighs only 69.7 kilograms, has lost 52 kilograms since 1 October 2021, and cannot move without a wheelchair. Despite this, the Court did not deem this sufficient and did not satisfy the motion of the defence in the case on the postponement of Saakashvili's sentence or his release.[178] In March 2023, Poland suggested sending doctors to Georgia to examine Saakashvili amid concerns about his health.[179]

While in prison, Saakashvili has remained politically active. In August 2023, Newsweek published an extensive opinion piece by Saakashvili,[180] in which he reflected on his decision to return to Georgia and the challenges he had faced in prison, writing:

There was a time a year ago, as my health was declining dramatically and death felt imminent, when I regretted coming back to Georgia. I thought to myself that if I survived this ordeal, if I tasted freedom again, I would leave Georgian politics behind for good. I felt my sacrifice had been a miscalculation, a folly. But even when I tried to turn my back on Georgian politics, Georgian politics kept returning to me. I have come to recognize that even as a prisoner with limited contact with the outside, I have a crucial role to play in Georgia's future, a role I cannot just walk away from.

Coup plot accusation edit

On 18 September 2023, the State Security Service of Georgia (SSG) accused Saakashvili and his followers of plotting with the Ukrainian government and Georgian Legion (a group of mostly ethnic Georgian volunteers fighting on behalf of Ukraine) of planning a coup d'état against the Georgian government. The SSG claimed that anti-government protests were being planned by Ukrainian intelligence for October and December 2023. The Georgian government filed eight criminal cases against Georgian Legion's commander Mamuka Mamulashvili and SSG placed a bounty to capture him. Mamulashvili stated that the claims of a coup were baseless, and that they were evidence that Georgian Dream is a Russophilic party.[181]

International reaction to Saakashvili's arrest edit

Saakashvili's arrest led to major criticism from the Ukrainian government, European Parliament, U.S. State Department and international organizations.

International criticism was focused on alleged violation of Saakashvili's human rights in prison, as well as on allegedly politically motivated legal proceedings against him. On 1 October 2021, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy also stated he would work to ensure Saakashvili's release, as Saakashvili is a Ukrainian citizen who was stripped of his Georgian citizenship in 2015.[169] This was criticized by Georgian authorities. Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Garibashvili said that Saakashvili would leave Georgia only after serving his time in prison.[182]

On 9 November, after Saakashvili was transferred to Gldani prison hospital, Amnesty International uploaded statement on Twitter, about Saakashvili: "#Georgia: ex-President #Saakashvili (5th week of hunger strike) violently transferred to prison hospital; allegedly threatened; denied dignity, privacy & adequate healthcare. Not just selective justice but apparent political revenge."[183]

On 18 November 2021, the U.S. State Department urged the Government of Georgia to treat Saakashvili fairly and guarantee his right to a fair trial, and also praised the independent medical team that criticized the prison conditions.[184][169]

On 28 June 2022, Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe has published declaration, in which they have said that Mikheil Saakashvili has to be treated immediately in a special institution abroad.[185]

On 14 December 2022, the European Parliament passed a resolution which urged the Georgian government to release Saakashvili on medical grounds to be treated abroad, while threatening to sanction Bidzina Ivanishvili, a founder of Georgian Dream party, for his role in "deteriorating the democratic political process in Georgia" .[186]

On 14 February 2023, the European Parliament adopted a third non-binding resolution, accusing the Georgian government and Bidzina Ivanishvili of mistreating Mikheil Saakashvili in prison, once again calling for his release from prison and personal sanctions on Ivanishvili.[28]

On 4 December 2022, Moldovan President Maia Sandu stated that she is “deeply concerned” about imprisoned ex-President Mikheil Saakashvili's "rapidly deteriorating state of health."

President Sandu also emphasized, "every human life is priceless and the gravity of the situation requires immediate transfer of Saakashvili to an appropriate hospital to save his life."

Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko also expressed his concerns about Saakashvili's health.

Following Saakashvili's hearing in the court in February 2023, President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy accused the Georgian government of "publicly torturing" Ukrainian citizen Saakashvili and he claimed that "Russia is killing Ukrainian citizen Mikheil Saakashvili with the hands of the Georgian authorities."[187] According to Zelenskyy, Ukraine had "repeatedly called on official Tbilisi to stop this mockery and agree on the return of Saakashvili to Ukraine."[188]

President Zelensky has instructed the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to summon the Georgian Ambassador to Ukraine, expressing a strong protest and requesting his departure within 48 hours for consultations with his capital in Tbilisi about transferring Saakashvili in Ukraine. Zelensky has uploaded statement on Twitter:

Right now, Russia is killing Ukrainian citizen Mykhailo Saakashvili at the hands of the Georgian authorities. We have repeatedly called on the official Tbilisi to stop this abuse and agree on Saakashvili's return to Ukraine. Our partners, in coordination with Ukraine, have also…

On 12 July 2023 Former US Ambassadors to Georgia issued a statement urging the Government of Georgia to allow “imprisoned and emaciated former president Mikheil Saakashvili to obtain life-saving medical treatment”.

With their letter, the Ambassadors William Harrison Courtney (1995-1997), Kenneth Spencer Yalowitz (1998-2001), Richard Monroe Miles (2002-2005), John F. Tefft (2005-2009), and Ian C. Kelly (2015-2018), joined the international concerns which have escalated following the frail and decimated appearance of former President Mikheil Saakashvili during a remote court hearing.

On 14 July 2023, 44 Members of European Parliament has written a letter addressed to President Zurabishvili, Parliamentary Speaker Papuashvili, and Prime Minister Garibashvili urging to transfer former Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili to one of the European Union member states. The MEPs stressed the need for Saakashvili to receive the necessary and appropriate medical care.

Reaction of Georgian government edit

Criticism led to heavy squabbles between Georgian government and Ukrainian and European leadership, as well as Western and international organizations. Georgian officials argued that legal proceedings against Saakashvili met all necessary legal standarts and accused Saakashvili of using "international lobbysts" to pressure the government to realize him. They have based their claims on documents published on U.S. Foreign Agents Registration Unit website, which contained information about Saakashvili's and his family members' spendings on lobbyists in the US, which were tasked with working on convincing U.S. congressmen and senators to impose sanctions against Georgia.[188]

In response to criticism about Saakashvili's deteriorating health, Georgian officials claimed Saakashvli was trying to evade prison through self-harm. In particular, Georgian Justice Minister Rati Bregadze said that Saakashvili is trying to evade prison through self-harm. He stated that there is no relevant evidence of Saakashvili being tortured and noted that the state "can not be held responsible for self-harm by the inmate, including his refusal to follow medical prescriptions".[189][190] Georgian officials claimed that this was part of a plan to pressure the government to release Saakashvili.

Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Garibashvili accused Ukraine of sending Saakashvili from Ukraine to overthrow Georgian government. However, according to Garibashvili, Saakashvili was arrested and the Ukrainian Government asked Tbilisi to release Saakashvili to Kyiv. Georgian Prime Minister claimed at a speech in parliament that the Ukrainian Government and the Georgian opposition are close ideological partners.[191]

In response to criticism from the European Parliament, Georgia's Prime Minister Irakli Garibashvili said that Saakashvili is "agent of the European Parliament". "The European Parliament has explicitly recognised with its shameful resolution that Saakashvili is their agent and they are doing everything to save their agent and get him out of prison. This is not going to happen. We told them and many of our international partners that Saakashvili committed many serious crimes and now the illegal border crossing has been added", said Garibashvili.[192]

The Georgian officials justified their positions based on the decisions of the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR). In 2011, the ECHR ruled on the ENUKIDZE AND GIRGVLIANI v. GEORGIA case, a high-profile murder case of head of the United Georgian Bank's Foreign Department Sandro Girgvliani, for which Saakashvili was convicted, saying that the state violated Girgvliani's right to life and that the government, the courts and the parliament coordinated to obstruct justice and free the criminals of their liability.[citation needed] In 2023, Saakashvili filed a case in the ECHR, stating that his rights had been violated in prison and calling the Court to order his transferal to a hospital in Warsaw in Poland. The Court rejected Saakashvili's request. In response, Georgian officials praised the Court. The ruling party chairman Irakli Kobakhidze said that the European Court remained a bastion of justice, unlike the European Parliament, which he described has having become trapped in corruption.[193]

Controversies edit

Ordering beating of Valery Gelashvili edit

On 14 July 2005, businessman and Republican member of parliament Valery Gelashvili was beaten by unknown people. Gelashvili suffered skull trauma, numerous fractures of facial bones, lacerations in the nose and forehead, and fractures of the bones of the upper and lower jaw. The incident occurred after daily newspaper Rezonansi published interview with Gelashvili, in which he talked about a conflict between him and Saakashvili over the former's house and made comments about Saakashvili's personal life. In 2004, Gelashvili was requested by authorities to hand over his apartment building to the state after the government decided to transform the nearby Road Traffic Police building into the new presidential residence. Gelashvili agreed but requested the construction works of the new presidential residence to be carried out by his construction firm Evra. Gelashvili alleged in the interview that the government had not paid the firm for construction. He later blamed authorities and Saakashvili for ordering his attack. When the new government came into power in 2012, they promised to start investigation. On 28 June 2018, Tbilisi City Court sentenced former President Mikheil Saakashvili to six years in prison in absentia for, among other crimes, ordering the attack on Valeri Gelashvili in 2005. Saakashvili was also banned from taking any state post for two years and three months.[194]

Violent dispersal of 2007 protests edit

Saakashvili received widespread criticism for his handling of the 2007 Georgian demonstrations, which were violently dispersed by the police using heavy-handed tactics. Saakashvili came under criticism for using rubber bullets and tear gas against protesters who were blocking Tbilisi's main transport artery, Rustaveli Avenue.[195][196]

Allegations of corruption edit

Saakashvili has been accused of corruption and amassing wealth after coming into power by his political opponents. Although petty corruption in Georgia has been largely eliminated by the Saakashvili administration, it was alleged that elite corruption remained a significant problem.[197] Alleged corruption in Saakashvili's inner circle was one of the main causes of 2007 Georgian demonstrations. Former Georgian Minister of Defense Irakli Okruashvili after his resignation accused Saakashvili of corruption and lobbying the interests of his own family. Okruashvili claimed that he caught the president's uncle with a $200,000 bribe but had to hush up the scandal at the president's request.[citation needed] It was alleged that Saakashvili's family members have acquired large number of state property by president's orders, and as a result, Saakashvili's family has emerged as one of the richest families in Georgia by the end of his second term. According to allegations, Saakashvili's family has taken over much of the higher education sector (his mother owning shares in several universities in Tbilisi), the spa industry and the advertisement sector. The opposition also accused then president Saakashvili of overseeing a system of elite corruption encompassing oil and minerals.[198] Saakashvili denied accusations of his political opponents, claiming that his administration has been one of the most successful in eliminating corruption. He accused his opponents of spreading lies and not being honest.[198] After leaving presidential post, Saakashvili has been charged by Prosecutor's Office of Georgia with illegal seizure of property and embezzlement of state funds. He and his supporters have denounced charges as politically motivated.[199]

Personal life edit

 
Sandra Roelofs, Michelle Obama, Mikheil Saakashvili and Barack Obama in 2009

Saakashvili is married to Dutch linguist Sandra Roelofs, whom he met in Strasbourg in 1993. The couple have two sons, Eduard and Nikoloz.[200] A few days before Saakashvili's October 2021 return to Georgia he recorded a video on Facebook with Ukrainian MP Yelyzaveta Yasko in which they disclosed they were having a romantic relationship.[201] A few days later Yasko remarked that Sandra Roelofs was Saakashvili's "ex-wife".[202] There had been no media reports that Saakashvili and his spouse Roelofs had divorced.[203] Roelofs had been "caught by surprise" by Yasko's and Saakashvili's video announcement and remarked on Facebook (on 7 October 2021) that "its form was absolutely unacceptable."[203] On 31 December 2021, Saakashvili recognized to have an extramarital daughter, Elis-Maria, with singer Sofia Nizharadze calling her "my most lovely girl and youngest child".[204] On 1 June 2023 Yasko revealed that she and Saakashvili had become parents, the gender and birthdate of the baby were not announced.[205] At the time of birth Saakashvili was imprisoned.[205]

Apart from his native Georgian, Saakashvili speaks fluent English, French, Russian and Ukrainian,[206][207] and has some command of Ossetian and Spanish.[208][209]

Some non-Georgian sources spell Saakashvili's first name using the Russian spelling, Mikhail. In Georgia, he is commonly known as Misha, a hypocorism for Mikheil.[210]

Saakashvili enjoys exercise and has in the past often been seen in public on his bicycle.[211]

Appraisal edit

In the 2010 study Competitive Authoritarianism: Hybrid Regimes After the Cold War, political scientists Steven Levitsky and Lucan A. Way cite various media and human rights reports to describe Saakashvili's Georgia as a "competitive authoritarian" (i.e., a formally democratic but essentially non-democratic) state.[212]

Saakashvili's government has been lauded by the World Bank for making "striking improvements" in the fight against corruption.[213][214] In addition, the US State Department noted[215] that in 2005 "the government amended several laws and increased the amount of investigations and prosecutions reducing the amount of abuse and ill-treatment in pre-trial detention facilities". The status of religious freedom also improved due to increased investigation and prosecution of those harassing followers of non-traditional faiths.[216][217]

The scrupulousness of Patarkatsishvili's political opposition toward the Georgian president has been questioned by the Jamestown Foundation's political analyst Vladimir Socor who attributed the businessman's discontent to Saakashvili's anti-corruption reforms, which "had severely curtailed Patarkatsishvili's scope for doing business in his accustomed, post-Soviet 1990s-style ways."[218] Patarkatsishvili—who had fled the Russian authorities after allegations of fraud—was called "a state criminal" by Saakashvili, who accused him of treason while refusing to admit to any of his accusations.[219]

Saakashvili was portrayed by Cuban-American Hollywood actor Andy García in the 2010 Hollywood film 5 Days of War by Finnish-American film director Renny Harlin.[220] The film tells the story of Saakashvili and the events during the Russo-Georgian War.[221]

Electoral history edit

Election Affiliation First round Second round
Votes Percentage Position Votes Percentage Position
2004 United National Movement 1,890,739
96.24%
1st
2008 United National Movement 1,060,042
54.73%
1st

Notes edit

  1. ^ During the same press conference Saakashvili vowed "to start a new stage of the struggle" with "young people, unstained forces."[106] According to Saakashvili: "We will definitely unite and we will fight for the victory of a new Ukraine for the people of Odesa, for all other residents of Ukraine. The fight continues, and we will definitely win this fight."[106]
  2. ^ The decree was not made publicly available "in accordance with the legislation on personal data protection".[110]
  3. ^ According to Saakashvili himself, he entered Poland with his Ukrainian passport but it is unclear what passport he travelled on as his Ukraine passport was invalidated and the country he had travelled from, the United States, is not a signatory to the 1954 United Nations multilateral treaty Convention Relating to the Status of Stateless Persons granting international travel documents to stateless persons.[114]
  4. ^ On 21 June 2019 a Ukrainian court ruled that Saakashvili had resided in Ukraine from 23 February 2014, to 6 June 2019; even though after he was stripped of his citizenship under a decree by President Petro Poroshenko he was deported for more than a year.[138]
  5. ^ In Ukraine only parliament can appoint and dismiss government ministers.[146]

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Further reading edit

  • Asmus, Ronald. A Little War that Shook the World : Georgia, Russia, and the Future of the West. NYU (2010). ISBN 978-0-230-61773-5
  • Savodnik, Peter (January 2009). "Essay: Georgian Roulette: Mikheil Saakashvili beckons from the brink". Harper's Magazine. Vol. 318, no. 1904. pp. 36–42.

External links edit

  • Mikheil Saakashvili on Facebook
  • Mikheil Saakashvili's channel on YouTube
  • 1st inauguration of Mikheil Saakashvili (2004)
  • 2nd inauguration of Mikheil Saakashvili (2008)
Political offices
Preceded by President of Georgia
2004–2007
Succeeded by
President of Georgia
2008–2013
Succeeded by

mikheil, saakashvili, this, article, lead, section, long, please, read, length, guidelines, help, move, details, into, article, body, january, 2023, georgian, მიხეილ, სააკაშვილი, mikheil, saak, ashvili, ˈmiχeil, ˈsaːkʼaʃʷili, ukrainian, Міхеіл, Саакашвілі, ixe. This article s lead section may be too long Please read the length guidelines and help move details into the article s body January 2023 Mikheil Saakashvili Georgian მიხეილ სააკაშვილი Mikheil Saak ashvili ˈmixeil ˈsaːkʼaʃʷili Ukrainian Miheil Saakashvili m ʲ ixeˈil sɐːkɐʃˈwil ʲ i also known as Misha in Georgia born 21 December 1967 is a Georgian and Ukrainian politician and jurist 7 8 He was the third president of Georgia for two consecutive terms from 25 January 2004 to 17 November 2013 From May 2015 until November 2016 Saakashvili was the governor of Ukraine s Odesa Oblast 1 9 He is the founder and former chairman of the United National Movement party Saakashvili heads the executive committee of Ukraine s National Reform Council since 7 May 2020 10 In 2021 he began serving a six year prison sentence in Georgia on charges of abuse of power and organization of an assault occasioning grievous bodily harm against an opposition lawmaker Valery Gelashvili 11 Mikheil Saakashviliმიხეილ სააკაშვილიMiheil SaakashviliSaakashvili in 20203rd President of GeorgiaIn office 20 January 2008 17 November 2013Prime MinisterLado GurgenidzeGrigol MgaloblishviliNika GilauriVano MerabishviliBidzina IvanishviliPreceded byNino Burjanadze acting Succeeded byGiorgi MargvelashviliIn office 25 January 2004 25 November 2007Prime MinisterZurab ZhvaniaHimself acting Zurab NogaideliGiorgi Baramidze acting Lado GurgenidzePreceded byNino Burjanadze acting Succeeded byNino Burjanadze acting Governor of Odesa OblastIn office 30 May 2015 9 November 2016 1 Preceded byIhor PalytsiaSucceeded byMaksym Stepanov 2 Minister of JusticeIn office 12 October 2000 19 September 2001PresidentEduard ShevardnadzePrime MinisterGiorgi ArsenishviliPreceded byJohn KhetsurianiSucceeded byRoland GiligashviliPrime Minister of GeorgiaActingIn office 3 February 2005 17 February 2005PresidentHimselfPreceded byZurab ZhvaniaSucceeded byZurab NoghaideliMember of the Parliament of GeorgiaIn office 6 November 2001 22 November 2002In office 25 November 1995 2 March 2001Chairman of the Tbilisi City AssemblyIn office 4 November 2001 2003Chair of Union of Citizens Faction in the Parliament of GeorgiaIn office 15 September 1998 20 November 1999In office 27 November 1999 10 October 2000Chair of Legal Issues Committee in the Parliament of GeorgiaIn office 27 November 1995 15 September 1998Chairman of the United National MovementIn office 2001 5 December 2015Preceded byposition establishedSucceeded byGrigol VashadzeHonorary Chairman of the United National MovementIncumbentAssumed office 24 March 2019Preceded byposition establishedPersonal detailsBorn 1967 12 21 21 December 1967 age 56 Tbilisi Georgian SSR Soviet UnionCitizenshipSoviet 1967 1991 Georgian 1991 2015 Ukrainian 2015 2017 2019 present Stateless 2017 2019 3 4 Political partyMovement of New Forces 5 2017 present United National Movement 2001 present Union of Citizens of Georgia 1995 2001 SpouseSandra Roelofs m 1994 wbr 6 Children4EducationNational University of KyivColumbia UniversityGeorge Washington UniversityInternational Institute of Human RightsSignatureWebsitesaakashvilimikheil wbr com Saakashvili entered Georgian politics in 1995 He served as member of parliament and minister of justice under President Eduard Shevardnadze Saakashvili later moved to opposition establishing the United National Movement party In 2003 Saakashvili became a leading opposition figure who accused the government of rigging the 2003 Georgian parliamentary election spearheading mass protests which saw President Shevardnadze resign from his post in the bloodless Rose Revolution Saakashvili s key role in the protests led to him being elected as the President in 2004 He was later reelected as President in 2008 However his party suffered defeat in the 2012 Georgian parliamentary election while Saakashvili was barred by the constitution of Georgia from seeking a third term in the 2013 presidential election which was also won by the opposition candidate During his tenure as president Saakashvili oversaw police military economic and government reforms As the new Patrol Police department was established the entire police force was fired and replaced with new one in an effort to root out corruption The bureaucratic spendings were decreased as several ministries were abolished to cut the government size Military budget rose to 9 2 of GDP by 2007 to strengthen the nation s defense capability The government pursued a zero tolerance policy towards crime Saakashvili appointed Kakha Bendukidze as the Minister of Economy to implement economic liberalization and rapid privatization Georgia s economy grew 70 between 2003 and 2013 and per capita income roughly tripled However poverty only marginally declined At the end of Saakashvili s second term about a quarter of the population was still living below the absolute poverty rate Georgia s ranking in the Corruption Perceptions Index by Transparency International improved dramatically from rank 133 in 2004 to 67 in 2008 and further to 51 in 2012 surpassing several EU countries The World Bank ranked the country 8th in terms of ease of doing business and named it as the leading economic reformer in the world The Abkhaz Georgian and Georgian Ossetian conflicts continued during Saakashvili s presidency and saw a major escalation in 2008 which saw Russia officially announcing its support for separatists in Abkhazia and South Ossetia Saakashvili led Georgia through the 2008 Russo Georgian War which ended after five days of fighting by a ceasefire agreement negotiated by the French president Nicolas Sarkozy The war resulted in Georgia losing all of its possessions in the disputed territories Russia subsequently recognized the independence of Abkhazia and South Ossetia while Georgia responded with breaking diplomatic relations On the economic front Saakashvili pursued a neoliberal policy abolition of the minimum wage dismissal of 60 000 civil servants lowering of corporate income tax from 20 to 15 and dividend tax from 10 to 5 In 2009 Forbes ranked Georgia as the fourth country with the lowest tax burden in the world 12 During Saakashvili s tenure Georgia went through several political crises In 2007 mass demonstrations erupted demanding resignation of Saakashvili The protests which were triggered by detention of Georgian politician Irakli Okruashvili were violently dispersed by the special forces on 7 November 2007 The largest opposition media Imedi TV was raided by the police and transformed into a pro government channel Another wave of protests erupted in 2009 In May 2011 the government again violently responded to the opposition protests staged by Saakashvili s former ally Nino Burjanadze Saakashvili was embroiled in a number of scandals the most important ones relating to the beating of the opposition politician Valery Gelashvili and the murder of Sandro Girgvliani In September 2012 the leaked video footage of systemic torture and rape in the Georgian prison system came to light during the Gldani prison scandal Saakashvili was accused of being behind police brutality and the inhuman treatment of inmates Shortly after the 2013 presidential election Saakashvili left Georgia 13 In 2014 the Prosecutor s Office of Georgia filed criminal charges against Saakashvili In 2018 the Tbilisi City Court sentenced him in absentia to six years in prison for ordering the beating of Valeri Gelashvili and pardoning in prior agreement the individuals tried for Sandro Girgvliani s murder 11 Saakashvili continued to manage his party from abroad while accusing the Georgian government of using the legal system as a tool of political retribution Saakashvili supported Ukraine s Euromaidan movement and the Revolution of Dignity 14 On 30 May 2015 Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko appointed Saakashvili as Governor of Odesa Oblast 15 16 17 He was also granted Ukrainian citizenship 15 and due to restrictions on dual nationality under Georgian law was stripped of his Georgian citizenship 18 On 7 November 2016 Saakashvili resigned as governor while blaming President Poroshenko personally for enabling corruption in Odesa and in Ukraine overall 9 Four days later he announced his goal to create a new political party called Movement of New Forces 19 20 On 26 July 2017 Saakashvili at the time staying in the US was stripped of his Ukrainian citizenship by Petro Poroshenko and became a stateless person 21 22 He reentered Ukraine with a group of supporters through Poland but was arrested in February 2018 and deported Saakashvili moved to the Netherlands where he was granted permanent residency On 29 May 2019 he returned to Ukraine after newly elected President Volodymyr Zelenskyy restored his citizenship 23 24 On 1 October 2021 Saakashvili announced via Facebook his return to Georgia after an eight year absence on the eve of the local elections 25 26 Later on the same day Prime Minister of Georgia Irakli Garibashvili held a press briefing announcing that Saakashvili had been arrested in Tbilisi 27 According to the investigation Saakashvili entered the country secretly hiding in a semi trailer truck loaded with milk products He illegally crossed the state border of Georgia bypassing the customs control 28 He was placed in the No 12 penitentiary facility in Rustavi President of Georgia Salome Zourabichvili stated that she would never pardon Saakashvili He has been transferred to hospital numerous times due to his health condition and since May 2022 he is being treated in a civilian clinic in Tbilisi 29 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Election to Georgian Parliament 3 In the United National Movement 4 First presidency 4 1 Economic and government reforms 4 2 Law and order 4 3 Military reforms 4 4 Education reform 4 5 Health reforms 4 6 Foreign relations 4 7 Assassination attempt 4 8 2007 crisis 5 Second presidency 5 1 2008 presidential election 5 2 Changes in the Cabinet 5 3 Russo Georgian War 5 4 2009 opposition demonstrations and armed mutiny 5 5 End of presidency 5 6 Legal prosecution in Georgia since the end of presidency 6 Ukraine 6 1 Governor of Odesa 6 2 Movement of New Forces 6 3 Stripping of Ukrainian citizenship 6 4 Legal prosecution in Ukraine 6 5 Return to Ukraine 7 Political activity in Georgia since the end of presidency 8 Return to Georgia 8 1 Coup plot accusation 8 2 International reaction to Saakashvili s arrest 8 2 1 Reaction of Georgian government 9 Controversies 9 1 Ordering beating of Valery Gelashvili 9 2 Violent dispersal of 2007 protests 9 3 Allegations of corruption 10 Personal life 11 Appraisal 12 Electoral history 13 Notes 14 References 15 Further reading 16 External linksEarly life and education editSaakashvili was born to a Georgian family in Tbilisi on 21 December 1967 capital of the then Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic in the Soviet Union 30 31 His father Nikoloz Saakashvili is a physician who practises medicine in Tbilisi and directs a local balneological centre His mother Giuli Alasania is a historian who lectures at Tbilisi State University During university he served his shortened military service in 1989 1990 with the Soviet Border Troops checkpoint unit in the Boryspil Airport in Ukraine then as Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic also a part of the Soviet Union Saakashvili graduated from the Institute of International Relations Department of International Law of the Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv in then independent Ukraine in 1992 At this university he was friends with later President of Ukraine Petro Poroshenko 32 While in Ukraine Saakashvili participated in the October 1990 student protest known as the Revolution on Granite 33 Saakashvili briefly worked as a human rights officer for the interim State Council of Georgia following the overthrow of President Zviad Gamsakhurdia before receiving a fellowship from the United States State Department via the Edmund S Muskie Graduate Fellowship Program He received an LL M from Columbia Law School in 1994 and took classes at the School of International and Public Affairs and The George Washington University Law School the following year In 1993 he also received a diploma from the International Institute of Human Rights in Strasbourg France 34 Election to Georgian Parliament editSaakashvili interned at the United Nations 35 After graduation while on internship in the New York law firm of Patterson Belknap Webb amp Tyler in early 1995 he was approached by Zurab Zhvania an old friend from Georgia who was working on behalf of President Eduard Shevardnadze to enter politics He stood in the December 1995 elections along with Zhvania and both men won seats in parliament standing for the Union of Citizens of Georgia Shevardnadze s party Saakashvili was chairman of the parliamentary committee which was in charge of creating a new electoral system an independent judiciary and a non political police force Opinion surveys recognised him to be the second most popular person in Georgia behind Shevardnadze He was named man of the year dubious discuss by a panel of journalists and human rights advocates in 1997 In January 2000 Saakashvili was appointed vice president of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe On 12 October 2000 Saakashvili became Minister of Justice for the government of President Shevardnadze He initiated major reforms in the Georgian criminal justice and prisons system This earned praise dubious discuss from international observers and human rights activists citation needed But in mid 2001 he became involved in a major controversy with the State Security Minister Vakhtang Kutateladze and Tbilisi police chief Ioseb Alavidze accusing them of profiting from corrupt business deals Saakashvili resigned on 5 September 2001 saying that I consider it immoral for me to remain as a member of Shevardnadze s government He declared that corruption had penetrated to the very centre of the Georgian government and that Shevardnadze lacked the will to deal with it warning that current developments in Georgia will turn the country into a criminal enclave in one or two years In the United National Movement editThis section of a biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page especially if potentially libelous Find sources Mikheil Saakashvili news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Further information Rose Revolution Having resigned from the government and quit the Shevardnadze run Union of Citizens of Georgia party Saakashvili founded the United National Movement UNM in October 2001 a centre right political party with a touch of nationalism to provide a focus for part of the Georgian reformists leaders In June 2002 he was elected as the Chairman of the Tbilisi Assembly Sakrebulo following an agreement between the United National Movement and the Georgian Labour Party This gave him a powerful new platform from which to criticize the government Georgia held parliamentary elections on 2 November 2003 which were denounced by local and international observers as being grossly rigged Saakashvilli claimed that he had won the elections a claim supported by independent exit polls and urged Georgians to demonstrate against Shevardnadze s government and engage in nonviolent civil disobedience against the authorities Saakashvili s UNM and Burdjanadze Democrats united to demand the ouster of Shevardnadze and the rerun of the elections Massive political demonstrations were held in Tbilisi in November with over 100 000 people participating and listening to speeches by Saakashvili and other opposition figures The Kmara Enough youth organization a Georgian counterpart of the Serbian Otpor and several NGOs like Liberty Institute were active in all protest activities After an increasingly tense two weeks of demonstrations Shevardnadze resigned as president on 23 November to be replaced on an interim basis by parliamentary speaker Nino Burjanadze While the revolutionary leaders did their best to stay within the constitutional norms many called the change of government a popular coup dubbed by Georgian media as the Rose Revolution Saakashvili s storming of Georgia s parliament in 2003 put U S diplomats off guard Saakashvili ousted a leader the U S had long backed Eduard Shevardnadze 36 Seeking support Saakashvili went outside the U S State Department He hired Randy Scheunemann then Sen John McCain s top foreign policy adviser as a lobbyist and used Daniel Kunin of USAID and the NDI as a full time adviser 36 On 24 February 2004 the United National Movement and the United Democrats had amalgamated The new political movement was named the National Movement Democrats NMD The movement s main political priorities include raising pensions and providing social services to the poor its main base of support fighting corruption and increasing state revenue First presidency edit nbsp Saakashvili s inauguration as president of Georgia nbsp Presidents Saakashvili and George W Bush in Tbilisi on 10 May 2005 The 2004 presidential election were carried out on 4 January 2004 The election was an outcome of the bloodless Rose Revolution and a consequent resignation of President Eduard Shevardnadze It is well known for a very high level of electoral turnout and also for the number of votes cast for one particular presidential candidate Mikheil Saakashvili 96 All other candidates received less than 2 of the votes In total 1 763 000 eligible voters participated in the election On 4 January 2004 Saakashvili won the presidential elections in Georgia with more than 96 of the votes cast making him at 36 years old the youngest national president in Europe at the time On a platform of opposing corruption and improving pay and pensions he promised to improve relations with the outside world Although he is strongly pro Western and intended to seek Georgian membership of NATO and the European Union he had also spoken of the importance of better relations with Russia He faced major problems however particularly Georgia s difficult economic situation and the still unresolved question of separatism in the regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia Abkhazia regards itself as independent of Georgia and did not take part in the elections while South Ossetia favours union with its northern counterpart in Russia Saakashvili was sworn in as president in Tbilisi on 25 January 2004 Immediately after the ceremony he signed a decree establishing a new state flag On 26 January in a ceremony held at the Tbilisi Kashueti Church of Saint George he promulgated a decree granting permission for the return of the body of the first president of Georgia Zviad Gamsakhurdia from Grozny Chechen Republic to Tbilisi and renaming a major road in the capital after Gamsakhurdia He also released 32 Gamsakhurdia supporters political prisoners imprisoned by the Shevardnadze government in 1993 94 As well as a new national flag Saakashivili authorised the adoption of a new national anthem on 20 May 2004 and the establishment of a new state arms on 1 October 2004 nbsp Anti Saakashvili poster in Tbilisi 2006 In the first months of his presidency Saakashvili faced a major political crisis in the southwestern Autonomous Republic of Adjara run by an authoritarian regional leader Aslan Abashidze who largely ignored the central Georgian government and was viewed by many as a pro Russian politician The crisis threatened to develop into an armed confrontation but Saakashvili s government managed to resolve the conflict peacefully forcing Abashidze to resign on 6 May 2004 Success in Adjara encouraged the new president to intensify his efforts towards bringing the breakaway South Ossetia back under the Georgian jurisdiction The separatist authorities responded with intense militarization in the region that led to armed clashes in August 2004 A stalemate ensued and despite a peace plan proposed by the Georgian government in 2005 the conflict remains unresolved In late July 2006 Saakashvili s government dealt successfully with another major crisis this time in Abkhazia s Kodori Gorge where Georgia s police forces disarmed a defiant militia led by a local warlord Emzar Kvitsiani In his foreign policy Saakashvili maintained close ties with the US as well as other NATO countries and remains one of the key partners of the GUAM organization The Saakashvili led Rose Revolution has been described by the White House as one of the most powerful movements in the modern history 37 that has inspired others to seek freedom 38 Economic and government reforms edit At the time Saakashvili took office Georgia suffered from a stagnant economy widespread corruption by police and state officials to the point where bribery was needed for any kind of commercial transaction high crime rates and severe infrastructure problems including widespread power outages and schools and medical facilities falling into disrepair 39 Saakashvili set out on a massive reform programme He systematically fired politicians public officials and police officers suspected of corruption and significantly raised the salaries of state employees to the point where they could depend on their salaries rather than bribes for a living Many oligarchs who had dominated the economy were arrested with most agreeing to pay massive fines into the state budget in exchange for their freedom Saakashvili reformed the economy by cutting red tape which had made business difficult courting foreign investment simplifying the tax code launching a privatization campaign and tackling widespread tax evasion Due to the establishment of a functioning taxation and customs infrastructure the state budget increased by 300 within three years The government massively upgraded infrastructure and public services In particular water and power infrastructure was improved to the point where it functioned effectively schools and hospitals were renovated more roads were laid and new housing developments were built 40 41 42 43 44 45 As a result the rate of corruption in the country was drastically reduced and the business environment was improved significantly The economy began growing and the standard of living rose Georgia s ranking in the Corruption Perceptions Index by Transparency International improved dramatically from rank 133 46 in 2004 to 67 in 2008 47 and further to 51 in 2012 surpassing several EU countries 48 49 The World Bank named Georgia as the leading economic reformer in the world and the country ranked 8th in terms of ease of doing business while most of the country s neighbours are ranked somewhere in the hundreds 50 The World Bank noted a significant improvement in living conditions in Georgia reporting that Georgia s transformation since 2003 has been remarkable The lights are on the streets are safe and public services are corruption free 42 Doing Business report founder Simeon Dyankov has given Georgia as an example to other reformers during the annual Reformer Awards Under Saakashvili s term Georgia became involved in international market transactions to a small extent and in 2007 Bank of Georgia sold bonds at premium when 200m five year bond was priced with a coupon of 9 per cent at par or 100 per cent of face value after initially being priced at 9 5 per cent and investors pushed orders up to 600m 51 In 2009 he introduced The Economic Liberty Act of Georgia which was adopted by the Parliament of Georgia in 2011 The Act restricted the state s ability to interfere in the economy and was aimed at reducing the state expenses and debt by 30 and 60 respectively It also explicitly prohibited the Government from changing taxes without a popular referendum on rates and structure Due to his government s economic reforms Georgia s economy grew 70 between 2003 and 2013 and per capita income roughly tripled 52 However poverty only marginally declined At the end of his second term about a quarter of the population was still poor and unemployment was at 15 40 Law and order edit On 27 March 2006 the government announced that it had prevented a nationwide prison riot plotted by criminal kingpins The police operation ended with the deaths of 7 inmates and at least 17 injuries While the opposition cast doubts over the official version and demanded an independent investigation the ruling party was able to vote down such initiatives 53 Despite this Saakashvili s government also eased the legal system in some respects His government decriminalized libel and pushed through legislation upholding freedom of speech although he was accused of stifling the media and using the judicial system to go after his political opponents in spite of this In December 2006 Saakashvili signed a constitutional amendment completely abolishing the death penalty in law 40 54 Military reforms edit Saakashvili s government massively increased military spending to modernize the Georgian Armed Forces which were small and poorly equipped and trained at the time he entered office By 2007 the military budget had increased twenty fold since 1999 New weapons and vehicles were purchased military salaries were raised new bases were built and Georgian soldiers engaged in joint training exercises with the US military 43 55 Education reform edit When Saakashvili took office the university entrance system was bribe based with a university spot costing up to 50 000 in 2003 His government introduced a common entrance exam replacing the bribe based system with a merit based one The quality of university education also improved Despite this Saakashvili was accused of failing to reform the quality of primary and secondary level school education which reportedly remained low at the end of his term in office 40 42 Health reforms edit After Georgian independence the government found that its Soviet style centralized healthcare system was underfunded and failing State run centralized medical facilities were typically inefficient and in need of renovation and technological upgrades As a result the government privatized almost all public hospitals and clinics and the insurance system was deregulated with private insurance companies able to offer coverage Only a few specialized facilities for mental health and infectious diseases remained in government hands and the state continued to provide health insurance for those below the poverty line whose insurance was paid for by public funds and provided by private insurers and some civil servants amounting to about 40 of the population As a result the level of healthcare greatly improved with new hospitals and clinics beginning to replace older facilities However a portion of the population was left uninsured as it could not afford private insurance and did not qualify for public insurance 56 57 Foreign relations edit nbsp U S President George W Bush and Saakashvili meet in Tbilisi on May 10 2005 nbsp Mikheil Saakashvili with President of Poland Lech Kaczynski in 2007 nbsp Mikheil Saakashvili with U S Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in 2010 Saakashvili sees membership of the NATO as a premise of stability for Georgia and offered an intensified dialogue with the de facto Abkhaz and Ossetian authorities Until the 2008 South Ossetia war a diplomatic solution was thought to be possible Saakashvili s administration doubled the number of its troops in Iraq making Georgia one of the biggest supporters of Coalition Forces and keeping its troops in Kosovo and Afghanistan to contribute to what it describes as global security 58 Saakashvili s government maintained diplomatic relations with other Caucasian states and Eastern European countries with Western orientation such as Armenia Azerbaijan Estonia Latvia Lithuania Poland Romania Turkey and Ukraine In 2004 Saakashvili visited Israel to attend the official opening of the Modern Energy Problems Research Center and Dr Brenda Schaffer the director of the centre described Saakashvili as the Nelson Mandela of the 21st century 59 In August of the same year Saakashvili who holds an honorary doctorate from the University of Haifa travelled to Israel to attend the opening of the official Week of Georgian Jewish Friendship held under the auspices of the Georgian president for which the Jewish leaders were invited as honoured guests 59 Relations with the United States were good but were complicated by Saakashvili s volatile behaviour Former and current US officials characterized the Georgian president as difficult to manage They criticized his risky moves moves that have often caught the U S unprepared while leaving it exposed diplomatically 36 Saakashvili s ties with the US go back to 1991 see Early life and career Biographies of Thomas Jefferson and John F Kennedy can be found in his office next to biographies of Joseph Stalin and Mustafa Kemal Ataturk and books on war Seeking US support Saakashvili went outside the United States Department of State and established contacts with Sen John McCain and forces seeking NATO expansion 36 Saakashvili believes that the long term priority for the country is to advance its membership in the European Community and during a meeting with Javier Solana he said that in contrast with new and old European states Georgia is an Ancient European state Assassination attempt edit On 10 May 2005 while U S President George W Bush was giving a speech in Tbilisi s Freedom Square Vladimir Arutyunian threw a live hand grenade at where Saakashvili and Bush were sitting It landed in the crowd about 20 metres 65 ft from the podium after hitting a girl and did not detonate Arutyunian was arrested in July of that year but before his capture he managed to kill one law enforcement agent He was convicted of the attempted assassinations of Saakashvili and Bush and the murder of the agent and given a life sentence 60 2007 crisis edit Main article 2007 Georgian demonstrations nbsp Saakashvili at the 2007 European People s Party Summit in Lisbon The late Georgian businessman Badri Patarkatsishvili claimed that pressure had been exerted on his financial interests after Imedi Television broadcast several accusations against officials On 25 October 2007 former defence minister Irakli Okruashvili accused the president of planning Patarkatsishvili s murder 61 62 63 Okruashvili was detained two days later on charges of extortion money laundering and abuse of office 64 However in a videotaped confession released by the General Prosecutor s Office on 8 October 2007 in which Okruashvili pleaded guilty to large scale bribery through extortion and negligence while serving as minister he retracted his accusations against the president and said that he did so to gain some political benefit and that Badri Patarkatsishvili told him to do so 65 Okruashvili s lawyer and other opposition leaders said his retraction had been made under duress 66 Georgia faced the worst crisis since the Rose Revolution A series of anti government demonstration were sparked in October by accusations of murders and corruption levelled by Irakli Okruashvili Saakashvili s erstwhile associate and former member of his government against the president and his allies The protests climaxed early in November 2007 and involved several opposition groups and the influential media tycoon Badri Patarkatsishvili Although the demonstrations rapidly went downhill the government s decision to use police force against the remaining protesters evolved into clashes in the streets of Tbilisi on 7 November The declaration of state of emergency by the president 7 16 November and the restriction imposed on some mass media sources led to harsh criticism of the Saakashvili government both in the country and abroad Human Rights Watch criticized the Georgian government for using excessive force against protesters in November and International Crisis Group warned of growing authoritarianism 67 Patarkatsishvili s opposition television station Imedi was shut down in November 2007 after the authorities accused it of complicity with the plot to overthrow the elected government The channel resumed broadcasts a few weeks after the incident but did not cover news or talk shows until after the election 68 Subsequently the station was sold to supporters of the Saakashvili government 69 and some Georgian journalists have called for the station to be handed back 70 On 8 November 2007 President Saakashvili announced a compromise solution to hold early presidential elections for 5 January 2008 He also proposed to hold a plebiscite in parallel to snap presidential elections about when to hold parliamentary polls in spring as pushed for by the opposition parties or in late 2008 Several concessions in the election code were also made to the opposition 71 On 23 November 2007 the ruling United National Movement party officially nominated Saakashvili as its candidate for the upcoming elections Pursuant to the Constitution of Georgia Saakashvili resigned on 25 November to launch his pre election campaign for early presidential polls 72 Second presidency edit nbsp Graffiti in Tbilisi 2008 presidential election edit nbsp Saakashvili in 2008 On 5 January 2008 an early presidential election was held nationwide with the exception of the highland village of Shatili where the polling station was not opened due to high levels of snowfall In a televised address President Saakashvili had proposed to hold the election earlier than called for by the Georgian constitution in order to resolve the political tension surrounding opposition led demonstrations their suppression by the government on 7 November 2007 and the closure of the most popular opposition television network Imedi Saakashvili said in his presidential address that these elections will be held according to our timing and not that of our ill wishers Changes in the Cabinet edit Saakashvili publicly announced his plans of modernising the Cabinet of Georgia well before Georgian presidential elections Shortly after being re elected the president formally re appointed the Prime Minister of Georgia Lado Gurgenidze and asked him to present a renewed cabinet to the Parliament of Georgia for final approval Gurgenidze changed most ministers leaving Ivane Merabishvili controversial Minister for Home Affairs Defence Minister Davit Kezerashvili and Minister of Finance Nika Gilauri on their former positions Gia Nodia was appointed as the Minister of Education and Science Zaza Gamcemlidze former director of Tbilisi Botanic Garden took over the position of the Minister of Natural Resources and Nature Protection Famous archaeologist and already the eldest minister in the cabinet Iulon Gagoshidze was appointed on a newly designated position of the Minister of State for Diasporas Parliamentary elections held during Saakashvili s second term were condemned by the Organization for Security and Co operation in Europe election monitoring mission for being marred by ballot stuffing violence against opposition campaigners uncritical coverage of the president and his party from the state controlled media and public officials openly campaigning for the president s party 73 On 28 October 2008 Saakashvili proposed Grigol Mgaloblishvili Georgian ambassador to Turkey for the premiership According to the President Gurgenidze had initially agreed to serve only for a year and that Georgia was facing new challenges which needed new approach The Parliament of Georgia approved Mgaloblishvili as the premier on 1 November 2008 Demonstrations against Saakashvili spread across Georgia in 2009 2011 and 2012 Russo Georgian War edit Main article Russo Georgian War See also Georgia Russia relations nbsp Meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin 22 February 2008 On 22 February 2008 Saakashvili held an official meeting with the President of Russia Vladimir Putin in his residence in Novo Ogaryovo The presidents discussed the issues of aviation regulations between the two countries 74 This was Putin s last meeting in his second term as the President of Russia being succeeded by Dimitry Medvedev shortly thereafter However after a series of clashes between Georgians and South Ossetians Russian military forces intervened on the side of the South Ossetian separatists in response to the Georgian attack on Tskhinvali and invaded Gori in Shida Kartli The two counterparts were led to a ceasefire agreement and a six point peace plan due to the French President s mediation On 26 August 2008 the Russian president Dmitry Medvedev signed a decree recognizing Abkhazia and South Ossetia as independent states Also on 26 August in response to Russia s recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia Deputy Foreign Minister Grigol Vashadze announced that Georgia had broken diplomatic relations with Russia Medvedev held Saakashvili responsible for the Russo Georgian War and states that Saakashvili is responsible for the collapse of the Georgian state 75 The Georgian military s capabilities were severely damaged by the war and Saakashvili s government moved to rebuild them massively increasing military spending By late 2010 the Georgian military reached a strength greater than that of pre war levels after which military spending declined again Although the Georgian government bought large amounts of arms and military equipment from abroad it also began to seriously invest in an indigenous military industry Starting in 2010 Georgia began to manufacture its own line of armoured vehicles artillery systems small arms and unmanned aerial vehicles 76 2009 opposition demonstrations and armed mutiny edit The pressure against Saakashvili intensified in 2009 when the opposition launched mass demonstrations against Saakashvili s rule On 5 May 2009 Georgian police said large scale disorders were planned in Georgia of which the failed army mutiny was part According to the police Saakashvili s assassination had also been plotted 77 Opposition figures dispute the claim of an attempted mutiny and instead say that troops refused an illegal order to use force against opposition demonstrators 78 End of presidency edit nbsp Mikheil Saakashvili 2013 On 2 October 2012 Saakashvili admitted defeat in Georgia s parliamentary election against Bidzina Ivanishvili in the election the day before 79 He was barred from seeking a third term in the 2013 presidential election Saakashvili left Georgia shortly after the election 13 In December 2013 Saakashvili accepted the position of lecturer and senior statesman at Tufts University in the United States 80 Legal prosecution in Georgia since the end of presidency edit On 23 March 2014 when Saakashvili was summoned to give testimony to the main prosecutor s office of Georgia the office planned to interrogate him about the pardoning in 2008 of four high ranking officials of the Department of Constitutional Security of the Georgian Ministry of Internal Affairs Gia Alania Avtandil Aptsiauri Alexander Gachava and Mikhail Bibiluridze who were convicted for causing the death of bank employee Sandro Girgvliani on 28 January 2006 as well as for unlawful actions against his friend Levan Bukhaidze He was also to be questioned as a witness for nine criminal cases including the death of the Prime Minister of Georgia Zurab Zhvania in 2005 81 On 28 July 2014 criminal charges were filed by the Georgian prosecutor s office against Saakashvili over allegedly exceeding official powers during the 2007 Georgian demonstrations as well as a police raid on and seizure of Imedi TV and other assets owned by the late tycoon Badri Patarkatsishvili Saakashvili then in Hungary responded by accusing the Georgian authorities of political score settling and attempts at appeasing Russia 82 The United States expressed concerns over the case and warned that the legal system should not be used as a tool of political retribution 83 The European Union stated that it took note with concern and it will closely monitor these and other legal proceedings against members of the former government and current opposition in Georgia 84 On 2 August 2014 Tbilisi City Court ordered pre trial detention in absentia for Saakashvili and the co accused Zurab Adeishvili chief prosecutor in 2007 and Davit Kezerashvili defense minister in 2007 with a preliminary hearing appointed for September 2014 85 On 13 August 2014 Saakashvili was charged with embezzling budget funds 86 On 14 August an internal search was declared and on 31 August the procedure for declaring an international search was launched 87 On 1 August 2015 Interpol refused to declare Saakashvili on the international wanted list as the Georgian authorities demanded 88 In September the property of the Saakashvili family was seized His personal bank accounts in Georgia were also seized In March 2015 Ukraine denied a Georgian request to extradite Saakashvili as it deemed the criminal cases against him politically motivated 89 Saakashvili stated on 1 June 2015 that he had given up three days before Georgian citizenship to avoid guaranteed imprisonment in Georgia 13 The Constitution of Ukraine forbids the extradition of Ukrainians to other states 90 On 8 August 2017 the Georgian General Prosecutor s Office claimed Saakashvili would face up to 11 years of imprisonment charges included the spending of public funding on personal needs abuse of power during the dispersal of a demonstration on 7 November 2007 the beating of former MP Valery Gelashvili and the raid of Imedi TV 91 On 18 August 2017 Georgia requested Ukraine to extradite Saakashvili On 5 September the Ukrainian authorities confirmed that they had received the request from Georgia 92 On 5 January 2018 the Tbilisi City Court sentenced Saakashvili to three year imprisonment in absentia for abusing power in pardoning the former Interior Ministry officials convicted in the 2006 Sandro Girgvliani murder case On 28 June 2018 the Tbilisi City Court found Saakashvili guilty of abusing his authority as president by trying to cover up evidence related to the 2005 beating of opposition lawmaker Valery Gelashvili and sentenced him in absentia to six years in prison Saakashvili and his supporters denounced the verdict as politically motivated 93 After returning to Georgia in 2021 Saakashvili was additionally charged for illegal border crossing 94 Ukraine editSaakashvili energetically supported Ukraine s Euromaidan movement and its Revolution of Dignity 14 On 7 March 2014 Saakashvili authored an op ed piece entitled When Putin invaded my country in the context of the turmoil in Ukraine after the ouster on 22 February of President Viktor Yanukovych and before the 16 March referendum in the 2014 Crimean crisis 95 In November 2013 Saakashvili moved to Williamsburg Brooklyn New York 96 Governor of Odesa edit On 13 February 2015 Saakashvili was appointed by the president of Ukraine Petro Poroshenko as head of the International Advisory Council on Reforms an advisory body whose main task is working out proposals and recommendations for implementation and introduction of reforms in Ukraine based on best international practices 97 On 30 May 2015 Poroshenko appointed Saakashvili Governor of Odesa Oblast region 15 On the previous day 29 May 2015 he was granted Ukrainian citizenship 15 98 A month before this appointment Saakashvili had stated that he had turned down the post of First Vice Prime Minister of Ukraine because in order to fulfill that post he would have had to become a Ukrainian citizen and renounce his Georgian citizenship 14 Saakashvili stated on 1 June 2015 that he had now changed his mind to avoid guaranteed imprisonment in Georgia and to defend Georgian interest through his governorship in Odesa 13 Also on 1 June the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Georgia stated that the appointment of Saakashvili would not have a negative impact on the relations between Georgia and Ukraine 99 But in reality after this appointment relations between the two countries soured 100 On 4 December 2015 Saakashvili was stripped of his Georgian citizenship due to restrictions on dual nationality under Georgian law 101 Saakashvili claimed that this was done to prevent him from leading the United National Movement in the 2016 Georgian parliamentary election 101 A poll by Sociological group RATING showed that in October 2015 Saakashvili was the most popular politician in Ukraine 43 viewed him positively 102 In December 2015 Saakashvili started an anti corruption NGO Movement for Purification 103 Among rumours that this NGO would be transformed into a political force Saakashvili stated he did not have the intention to create a new political party 103 In the autumn of 2015 informal attempts and negotiations were launched to form a political party around Saakashvili with members of the parliamentary group Interfactional Union Eurooptimists Democratic Alliance and possibly Self Reliance but this project collapsed in June 2016 104 Saakashvili submitted his resignation as governor on 7 November 2016 105 citing corruption in Ukraine as a main reason 9 In a press conference this same day he claimed that President Poroshenko personally supported corruption clans in the Odesa region and that the Odesa region is being handed over not only to corrupt people but also to enemies of Ukraine 9 106 nb 1 On 9 November 2016 President Poroshenko accepted Saakashvili s resignation as governor and dismissed him as his freelance adviser 1 Movement of New Forces edit nbsp Saakashvili led protesters demand Petro Poroshenko s impeachment Kyiv 3 December 2017 On 11 November 2016 Saakashvili announced his goal to create a new political party called Movement of New Forces 19 and that our goal is early parliamentary elections to be carried out as quickly as possible in the shortest possible time 20 In late February 2017 the Ministry of Justice of Ukraine registered Movement of New Forces officially as a political party 107 According to a poll by Sociological group RATING 18 viewed Saakashvili positively in April 2017 108 In Ukraine only Ukrainian citizens can lead political parties or be elected to its parliament 109 Stripping of Ukrainian citizenship edit On 26 July 2017 President Poroshenko issued a decree nb 2 stripping Saakashvili of his Ukrainian citizenship but without a reason for his doing so being stated Ukraine s migration service said in a statement that according to the Constitution of Ukraine the president takes decisions on who is stripped of Ukrainian citizenship based on the conclusions of the citizenship commission Saakashvili in response to his being stripped of citizenship replied I have only one citizenship that of Ukraine and I will not be deprived of it Now there is an attempt under way to force me to become a refugee This will not happen I will fight for my legal right to return to Ukraine A Ukrainian legislator from the Petro Poroshenko Bloc faction in parliament Serhiy Leshchenko said that Saakashvili was when Poroshenko issued his decree in the United States but that if he sought to return to Ukraine he would face extradition to Georgia to face charges for alleged crimes that occurred during his presidency there 21 111 According to The Economist most observers saw Poroshenko s stripping Saakashvili of his citizenship simply as the sidelining of a political rival at the time political polls gave Saakashvili s political party Movement of New Forces around 2 in a hypothetical early election 112 On 28 July 2017 Saakashvili told Newshour he wanted to return to Ukraine to get rid of the old corrupt elite there 113 On 4 August Saakashvili appeared in Poland nb 3 he left the country 4 days later travelling to Lithuania claiming I ll be travelling across Europe 115 116 Saakashvili announced on 16 August that he will return to Ukraine on 10 September 2017 through the Krakovets checkpoint and urged people to meet him at the checkpoint 117 118 On 10 September the train on which Saakashvili tried to enter Ukraine was held at a railway station in Przemysl Poland Then on the same day he travelled by bus to the Medyka Shehyni border crossing where he was allowed to pass through a Polish checkpoint on the border with Ukraine but then temporarily blocked from reaching the Ukrainian checkpoint by a line of border guards standing arm in arm Finally a crowd broke through from the Ukrainian side and took Saakashvili into Ukraine 119 120 121 122 On 12 September in the Leopolis Hotel in Lviv the State Border Guard Service of Ukraine acquainted Saakashvili with the protocol on the administrative violation of Illegal crossing or attempted illegal crossing of the state border of Ukraine 123 At a rally in the western Ukrainian city of Chernivtsi on 13 September Saakashvili announced that he would return to Kyiv on 19 September after travelling to several other cities to rally support 124 On 22 September the Mostysky District Court of the Lviv region found Saakashvili guilty of illegally crossing the state border Under the court s decision he must pay a fine of 200 non taxable minimums 3400 hryvni 125 In the first half of 2017 and in December 2018 and January 2019 Saakashvili hosted political talk shows on the TV channel Zik 126 Saakashvili claims his programme was axed in 2019 because his view on Yulia Tymoshenko s candidacy for the 2019 Ukrainian presidential election was distorted he claimed to support her candidacy while his TV show suggested the exact opposite 126 Legal prosecution in Ukraine edit On 5 December 2017 Saakashvili who was leading anti government protests at the time 127 was temporarily detained by Ukraine s Security Service on the roof of his apartment building in central Kyiv and his apartment was searched 128 He was freed from police by a large group of protesters Saakashvili s lawyer reported that the politician had been detained for attempting to overthrow Ukraine s constitutional system 129 whilst the SBU accused Saakashvili of receiving financing from a criminal group linked to ousted during the Revolution of Dignity Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych 130 On 8 December General Prosecutor of Ukraine Yuriy Lutsenko announced that National Police officers had found the location of Saakashvili detained him and placed him in a temporary detention centre 130 131 The following day Saakashvili began an indefinite hunger strike claiming to oppose any attempts at compulsory feeding 132 On 11 December a Ukrainian court released him from detention 133 On 12 February 2018 Saakashvili was deported to Poland The Ukrainian border service stated This person was on Ukrainian territory illegally and therefore in compliance with all legal procedures he was returned to the country from where he arrived Saakashvili was subsequently banned from entering Ukraine until 2021 by the Ukrainian border service 134 Saakashvili claimed that his Georgian bodyguards and supporters had in recent months been kidnapped tortured and deported to Georgia 135 On 14 February 2018 Saakashvili showed up in the Netherlands having been granted permanent residency there on the basis of family reunification 136 Return to Ukraine edit nbsp Mikheil Saakashvili 2019 In May 2019 Ukraine s new president Volodymyr Zelenskyy restored Saakashvili s Ukrainian citizenship 137 nb 4 On 29 May 2019 Saakashvili returned to Ukraine but he soon stated that he had no political ambitions in Ukraine 139 On 4 June Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko offered Saakashvili to join the leadership of his UDAR party and to take part in the July 2019 early parliamentary elections Saakashvili turned down the offer 139 In these elections Saakashvili headed the party list of Movement of New Forces 140 The party received 0 46 of the total votes and no seats 141 Two days before the election Saakashvili had called on his supporters to vote for the Servant of the People party at the election 142 Servant of the People won the election with 43 16 of the votes 141 Saakashvili wrote on his Facebook page on 22 April 2020 that he had received a proposal from President Zelenskyy to become Vice Prime Minister of Ukraine for reforms in the Shmyhal Government 7 143 Saakashvili told the Financial Times newspaper The president wants me to be in charge of talks with the IMF I have experience 144 The Ukrainian parliament did not consider the issue at its meetings on 24 and 30 April 2020 145 nb 5 On 7 May 2020 President Zelenskyy appointed Saakashvili head of the executive committee of the National Reform Council uk 10 Political activity in Georgia since the end of presidency editAfter stepping down as President in 2013 Saakashvili still remained an influential figure in Georgian politics He continued to manage the United National Movement party from abroad while accusing the Georgian government of using the legal system as a tool of political retribution Ahead of the 2016 Georgian parliamentary election Saakashvili said that he was confident that we the United National Movement are winning the election and promised to return to Georgia and take part in forming a new government Founder of the ruling Georgian Dream party Bidzina Ivanishvili accused Saakashvili of planning to stir disorders which Saakashvili denied and in turn accused Ivanishvili of blaming opponents for what he himself is planning 147 On 26 September 2016 Saakashvili addressed his supporters at the United National Movement s campaign rally in Zugdidi via video link from Odesa telling them that the victory is inevitable Saakashvili s wife Sandra Roelofs said that Saakashvili would return to Georgia to celebrate the victory Meanwhile members of the UNM affiliated group Free Zone held press briefing in Tbilisi accusing Saakashvili of instructing the leader of the organization Koba Khabazi to prepare for staging disorders In response to allegations the State Security Service of Georgia launched an investigation into charges of sabotage Other members of the Free Zone distanced themselves from these claims and in turn accused the defecting group of being under influence of the State Security Service 148 On 27 September 2016 a recording was uploaded on YouTube purportedly of a call between Mikheil Saakashvili and other UNM leaders discussing the need to pursue a revolutionary scenario The State Security Service launched an investigation into charges of conspiracy to overthrow or to seize state power Saakashvili denied the authenticity of the conversation and accused Bidzina Ivanishvili of trying to avoid unavoidable defeat 149 On 4 October 2016 Saakashvili accused Ivanishvili of being behind the explosion of car belonging to United National Movement MP Givi Targamadze alleging that Ivanishvili was trying to get rid of Targamadze because he has been keeping active contacts with the law enforcement officers which scares Ivanishvili very much 150 On 5 October 2016 Saakashvili addressed his supporters via video link in Tbilisi saying that three days were left before his return to Georgia After elections Saakashvili said that they were held with gross violations calling his supporters to protest 151 Saakashvili also expressed his support for boycotting the Parliament a step which other leaders of the United National Movement described as a suicide for the party On 4 November the UNM s political council rejected Saakashvili s calls to boycott Saakashvili slammed the decision and said that he had no desire to maintain contact with one or two whimsical persons from UNM accusing them of prescribing defeat for the party 152 On 1 December the political council voted to hold a congress in January to elect a new chairman 153 Saakashvili lost his right to be UNM s chairman in June 2015 when he was deprived of Georgian citizenship because under Georgian legislation only Georgian citizens can chair political parties in Georgia Since then this position remained vacant Some influential members of the party expressed support for further leaving the position vacant to avoid distancing the party from Mikheil Saakashvili and said that they would raise the issue on congress Saakashvili supported the idea of holding congress while some members of the party under the leadership of Giga Bokeria and Davit Bakradze accused Saakashvili of hijacking the congress organization in circumvention of the political council 154 155 On 12 January 2017 one week before the congress the United National Movement officially announced splitting 156 Members of the party who opposed boycotting the parliament and supported electing a new party chair opted to set up their own party The breakaway entity took the largely unknown legal vehicle of a previous party European Georgia A majority of the UNM s electoral list defected to European Georgia faction in the parliament leaving the UNM with six members in parliament Saakashvili thanked loyal members of the party for opposing efforts to distance me from the party and what he called Ivanishvili s attempt to take over the United National Movement He voiced the common belief among the UNM voters that these defections were encouraged by the ruling Georgian Dream Coalition in order to weaken its opposition On 20 January the UNM congress supported the proposal not to elect the party chairman until Mikheil Saakashvili would return to Georgia The European Georgia members accused the UNM of betraying the values of Rose Revolution and turning to populism In an interview with the online news website Netgazeti Giorgi Ugulava distinguished the EG as being more liberal than the UNM specifically describing the UNM as populist and communitarian 157 The UNM had no official chairman until 24 March 2019 when Saakashvili was succeeded as the UNM party s chairman by his own nominee Grigol Vashadze 158 Return to Georgia editPrior to 2021 Georgian local elections Saakashvili promised his supporters to return to Georgia 159 Such promises were made by Saakashvili numerous times including prior to 2016 Georgian parliamentary election and 2020 parliamentary election thus they were not perceived seriously by some political actors Many who alleged that Saakashvili regularly made such announcements to remain relevant among his supporters and mobilize them to vote in the elections citation needed Nevertheless Saakashvili s statements stirred significant controversy in Georgia with high ranking Georgian officials saying that Saakashvili would be arrested and sent to prison for his crimes These statements were made on the basis of Tbilisi City Court decisions in 2018 which condemned Saakashvili for six years in prison for abuse of power embezzlement and his role in the organization of a grievous bodily injury against an opposition lawmaker Valery Gelashvili Saakashvili and his supporters denounced these verdicts as politically motivated 93 On 1 October 2021 Saakashvili claimed to have returned to Georgia after an eight year absence and called on his followers to march on the capital Tbilisi 25 26 He published a video on Facebook claiming that he was in Batumi The Georgian police however claimed that Saakashvili had not crossed the country s border 26 Irakli Kobakhidze chairman of the Georgian ruling party Georgian Dream said that the video was deepfake and urged the voters to remain calm Mamuka Mdinaradze one of the leaders of Georgian Dream claimed He Saakashvili is in Ukraine we have specific information that this person did not leave Ukraine did not go to another country this person is in Ukraine he is trapped somewhere in a hole he hides from everyone to create the illusion that he is in Georgia 160 The video was shared and discussed on social media before the story began to appear on Georgia s TV channels For several hours both pro government and opposition TV channels actively engaged in the debate over Saakashvili s alleged homecoming video and whereabouts 161 At the same time pro Saakashvili Mtavari Arkhi TV featured a news program titled Saakashvili is in Georgia while pro government Imedi TV featured a news program titled Saakashvili is in Ukraine Georgia s Ministry of Internal Affairs reported that special forces were sent to Batumi in operation to detain Saakashvili 162 A few moments later Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Gharibashvili announced at a briefing together with the Minister of Internal Affairs Vakhtang Gomelauri and the head of the State Security Service Grigol Liluashvili that Mikheil Saakashvili was under arrest 27 Soon a video was published featuring handcuffed Saakashvili being taken into prison N12 in Rustavi According to the investigation Saakashvili entered the country secretly hiding in a semi trailer truck loaded with milk products He illegally crossed the state border of Georgia bypassing the customs control 28 He was arrested in Tbilisi by the police and taken to the prison in Rustavi 163 President of Georgia Salome Zourabichvili stated that she would never pardon Saakashvili 164 On 3 November 2021 Zourabichvili confirmed her first statement again 165 Saakashvili began a hunger strike in protest of what he considered as the state s refusal to give him a fair trial on charges which he thought would destroy him and Georgia 166 On 10 October 2021 his personal doctor asked authorities to move him to hospital as he continued with his hunger strike since his arrest and his health condition had allegedly worsened 167 On 14 October 2021 tens of thousands protested on Tbilisi s Rustaveli Avenue demanding the release of Saakashvili from prison Nika Melia a leader of the United National Movement came under criticism for ending a demonstration without presenting a plan of action or scheduling further protests some even questioning his ability to lead the party and his loyalty to Saakashvili pointing at the alleged internal power struggle within the party between Melia and Saakashvili Melia responded to criticism by denying the existence of any conflict 168 Georgia s rights ombudsman stated that Saakashvili was not being given proper medical care and was being abused by fellow inmates 169 The State Inspector s Service of Georgia launched a criminal investigation into alleged inhuman treatment of Mikheil Saakashvili 170 Since 1 March 2022 the Special Investigation Service of Georgia has continued investigating instead of the State Inspector s Service 171 On 8 November 2021 Saakashvili was moved to Gldani penitentiary hospital On 19 November 2021 Saakashvili was transferred to a Gori military hospital Saakashvili s doctor Nokoloz Kipshidze and lawyer Nika Gvaramia stated that Saakashvili would end the 50 day hunger strike 172 166 On 12 December 2021 Otar Toidze a doctor with Georgia s human rights commissioner said Saakashvili was in need of specialist treatment abroad 173 On 29 December 2021 he was taken from hospital to prison of Rustavi according to oppositional leaders and media his health conditions were still bad and he was still continuing decreasing weight according to his lawyer Nika Gvaramia 174 175 On 12 May 2022 Saakashvili was transferred to a civilian hospital in Tbilisi 29 On 1 December 2022 Saakashvili s lawyers appealed the court to either postpone Saakashvili s sentence or release him from prison on medical grounds On 24 January 2023 Saakashvili tested positive for COVID 19 176 On 1 February Saakashvili testified before the court remotely 177 He appeared to have lost a lot of weight as evidenced by protruding ribs and stomach According to his lawyer Saakashvili who is 195 cm in height weighs only 69 7 kilograms has lost 52 kilograms since 1 October 2021 and cannot move without a wheelchair Despite this the Court did not deem this sufficient and did not satisfy the motion of the defence in the case on the postponement of Saakashvili s sentence or his release 178 In March 2023 Poland suggested sending doctors to Georgia to examine Saakashvili amid concerns about his health 179 While in prison Saakashvili has remained politically active In August 2023 Newsweek published an extensive opinion piece by Saakashvili 180 in which he reflected on his decision to return to Georgia and the challenges he had faced in prison writing There was a time a year ago as my health was declining dramatically and death felt imminent when I regretted coming back to Georgia I thought to myself that if I survived this ordeal if I tasted freedom again I would leave Georgian politics behind for good I felt my sacrifice had been a miscalculation a folly But even when I tried to turn my back on Georgian politics Georgian politics kept returning to me I have come to recognize that even as a prisoner with limited contact with the outside I have a crucial role to play in Georgia s future a role I cannot just walk away from Coup plot accusation edit On 18 September 2023 the State Security Service of Georgia SSG accused Saakashvili and his followers of plotting with the Ukrainian government and Georgian Legion a group of mostly ethnic Georgian volunteers fighting on behalf of Ukraine of planning a coup d etat against the Georgian government The SSG claimed that anti government protests were being planned by Ukrainian intelligence for October and December 2023 The Georgian government filed eight criminal cases against Georgian Legion s commander Mamuka Mamulashvili and SSG placed a bounty to capture him Mamulashvili stated that the claims of a coup were baseless and that they were evidence that Georgian Dream is a Russophilic party 181 International reaction to Saakashvili s arrest edit Saakashvili s arrest led to major criticism from the Ukrainian government European Parliament U S State Department and international organizations International criticism was focused on alleged violation of Saakashvili s human rights in prison as well as on allegedly politically motivated legal proceedings against him On 1 October 2021 Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy also stated he would work to ensure Saakashvili s release as Saakashvili is a Ukrainian citizen who was stripped of his Georgian citizenship in 2015 169 This was criticized by Georgian authorities Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Garibashvili said that Saakashvili would leave Georgia only after serving his time in prison 182 On 9 November after Saakashvili was transferred to Gldani prison hospital Amnesty International uploaded statement on Twitter about Saakashvili Georgia ex President Saakashvili 5th week of hunger strike violently transferred to prison hospital allegedly threatened denied dignity privacy amp adequate healthcare Not just selective justice but apparent political revenge 183 On 18 November 2021 the U S State Department urged the Government of Georgia to treat Saakashvili fairly and guarantee his right to a fair trial and also praised the independent medical team that criticized the prison conditions 184 169 On 28 June 2022 Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe has published declaration in which they have said that Mikheil Saakashvili has to be treated immediately in a special institution abroad 185 On 14 December 2022 the European Parliament passed a resolution which urged the Georgian government to release Saakashvili on medical grounds to be treated abroad while threatening to sanction Bidzina Ivanishvili a founder of Georgian Dream party for his role in deteriorating the democratic political process in Georgia 186 On 14 February 2023 the European Parliament adopted a third non binding resolution accusing the Georgian government and Bidzina Ivanishvili of mistreating Mikheil Saakashvili in prison once again calling for his release from prison and personal sanctions on Ivanishvili 28 On 4 December 2022 Moldovan President Maia Sandu stated that she is deeply concerned about imprisoned ex President Mikheil Saakashvili s rapidly deteriorating state of health President Sandu also emphasized every human life is priceless and the gravity of the situation requires immediate transfer of Saakashvili to an appropriate hospital to save his life Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko also expressed his concerns about Saakashvili s health Following Saakashvili s hearing in the court in February 2023 President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy accused the Georgian government of publicly torturing Ukrainian citizen Saakashvili and he claimed that Russia is killing Ukrainian citizen Mikheil Saakashvili with the hands of the Georgian authorities 187 According to Zelenskyy Ukraine had repeatedly called on official Tbilisi to stop this mockery and agree on the return of Saakashvili to Ukraine 188 President Zelensky has instructed the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to summon the Georgian Ambassador to Ukraine expressing a strong protest and requesting his departure within 48 hours for consultations with his capital in Tbilisi about transferring Saakashvili in Ukraine Zelensky has uploaded statement on Twitter Right now Russia is killing Ukrainian citizen Mykhailo Saakashvili at the hands of the Georgian authorities We have repeatedly called on the official Tbilisi to stop this abuse and agree on Saakashvili s return to Ukraine Our partners in coordination with Ukraine have also On 12 July 2023 Former US Ambassadors to Georgia issued a statement urging the Government of Georgia to allow imprisoned and emaciated former president Mikheil Saakashvili to obtain life saving medical treatment With their letter the Ambassadors William Harrison Courtney 1995 1997 Kenneth Spencer Yalowitz 1998 2001 Richard Monroe Miles 2002 2005 John F Tefft 2005 2009 and Ian C Kelly 2015 2018 joined the international concerns which have escalated following the frail and decimated appearance of former President Mikheil Saakashvili during a remote court hearing On 14 July 2023 44 Members of European Parliament has written a letter addressed to President Zurabishvili Parliamentary Speaker Papuashvili and Prime Minister Garibashvili urging to transfer former Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili to one of the European Union member states The MEPs stressed the need for Saakashvili to receive the necessary and appropriate medical care Reaction of Georgian government edit Criticism led to heavy squabbles between Georgian government and Ukrainian and European leadership as well as Western and international organizations Georgian officials argued that legal proceedings against Saakashvili met all necessary legal standarts and accused Saakashvili of using international lobbysts to pressure the government to realize him They have based their claims on documents published on U S Foreign Agents Registration Unit website which contained information about Saakashvili s and his family members spendings on lobbyists in the US which were tasked with working on convincing U S congressmen and senators to impose sanctions against Georgia 188 In response to criticism about Saakashvili s deteriorating health Georgian officials claimed Saakashvli was trying to evade prison through self harm In particular Georgian Justice Minister Rati Bregadze said that Saakashvili is trying to evade prison through self harm He stated that there is no relevant evidence of Saakashvili being tortured and noted that the state can not be held responsible for self harm by the inmate including his refusal to follow medical prescriptions 189 190 Georgian officials claimed that this was part of a plan to pressure the government to release Saakashvili Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Garibashvili accused Ukraine of sending Saakashvili from Ukraine to overthrow Georgian government However according to Garibashvili Saakashvili was arrested and the Ukrainian Government asked Tbilisi to release Saakashvili to Kyiv Georgian Prime Minister claimed at a speech in parliament that the Ukrainian Government and the Georgian opposition are close ideological partners 191 In response to criticism from the European Parliament Georgia s Prime Minister Irakli Garibashvili said that Saakashvili is agent of the European Parliament The European Parliament has explicitly recognised with its shameful resolution that Saakashvili is their agent and they are doing everything to save their agent and get him out of prison This is not going to happen We told them and many of our international partners that Saakashvili committed many serious crimes and now the illegal border crossing has been added said Garibashvili 192 The Georgian officials justified their positions based on the decisions of the European Court of Human Rights ECHR In 2011 the ECHR ruled on the ENUKIDZE AND GIRGVLIANI v GEORGIA case a high profile murder case of head of the United Georgian Bank s Foreign Department Sandro Girgvliani for which Saakashvili was convicted saying that the state violated Girgvliani s right to life and that the government the courts and the parliament coordinated to obstruct justice and free the criminals of their liability citation needed In 2023 Saakashvili filed a case in the ECHR stating that his rights had been violated in prison and calling the Court to order his transferal to a hospital in Warsaw in Poland The Court rejected Saakashvili s request In response Georgian officials praised the Court The ruling party chairman Irakli Kobakhidze said that the European Court remained a bastion of justice unlike the European Parliament which he described has having become trapped in corruption 193 Controversies editOrdering beating of Valery Gelashvili edit On 14 July 2005 businessman and Republican member of parliament Valery Gelashvili was beaten by unknown people Gelashvili suffered skull trauma numerous fractures of facial bones lacerations in the nose and forehead and fractures of the bones of the upper and lower jaw The incident occurred after daily newspaper Rezonansi published interview with Gelashvili in which he talked about a conflict between him and Saakashvili over the former s house and made comments about Saakashvili s personal life In 2004 Gelashvili was requested by authorities to hand over his apartment building to the state after the government decided to transform the nearby Road Traffic Police building into the new presidential residence Gelashvili agreed but requested the construction works of the new presidential residence to be carried out by his construction firm Evra Gelashvili alleged in the interview that the government had not paid the firm for construction He later blamed authorities and Saakashvili for ordering his attack When the new government came into power in 2012 they promised to start investigation On 28 June 2018 Tbilisi City Court sentenced former President Mikheil Saakashvili to six years in prison in absentia for among other crimes ordering the attack on Valeri Gelashvili in 2005 Saakashvili was also banned from taking any state post for two years and three months 194 Violent dispersal of 2007 protests edit Saakashvili received widespread criticism for his handling of the 2007 Georgian demonstrations which were violently dispersed by the police using heavy handed tactics Saakashvili came under criticism for using rubber bullets and tear gas against protesters who were blocking Tbilisi s main transport artery Rustaveli Avenue 195 196 Allegations of corruption edit Saakashvili has been accused of corruption and amassing wealth after coming into power by his political opponents Although petty corruption in Georgia has been largely eliminated by the Saakashvili administration it was alleged that elite corruption remained a significant problem 197 Alleged corruption in Saakashvili s inner circle was one of the main causes of 2007 Georgian demonstrations Former Georgian Minister of Defense Irakli Okruashvili after his resignation accused Saakashvili of corruption and lobbying the interests of his own family Okruashvili claimed that he caught the president s uncle with a 200 000 bribe but had to hush up the scandal at the president s request citation needed It was alleged that Saakashvili s family members have acquired large number of state property by president s orders and as a result Saakashvili s family has emerged as one of the richest families in Georgia by the end of his second term According to allegations Saakashvili s family has taken over much of the higher education sector his mother owning shares in several universities in Tbilisi the spa industry and the advertisement sector The opposition also accused then president Saakashvili of overseeing a system of elite corruption encompassing oil and minerals 198 Saakashvili denied accusations of his political opponents claiming that his administration has been one of the most successful in eliminating corruption He accused his opponents of spreading lies and not being honest 198 After leaving presidential post Saakashvili has been charged by Prosecutor s Office of Georgia with illegal seizure of property and embezzlement of state funds He and his supporters have denounced charges as politically motivated 199 Personal life edit nbsp Sandra Roelofs Michelle Obama Mikheil Saakashvili and Barack Obama in 2009 Saakashvili is married to Dutch linguist Sandra Roelofs whom he met in Strasbourg in 1993 The couple have two sons Eduard and Nikoloz 200 A few days before Saakashvili s October 2021 return to Georgia he recorded a video on Facebook with Ukrainian MP Yelyzaveta Yasko in which they disclosed they were having a romantic relationship 201 A few days later Yasko remarked that Sandra Roelofs was Saakashvili s ex wife 202 There had been no media reports that Saakashvili and his spouse Roelofs had divorced 203 Roelofs had been caught by surprise by Yasko s and Saakashvili s video announcement and remarked on Facebook on 7 October 2021 that its form was absolutely unacceptable 203 On 31 December 2021 Saakashvili recognized to have an extramarital daughter Elis Maria with singer Sofia Nizharadze calling her my most lovely girl and youngest child 204 On 1 June 2023 Yasko revealed that she and Saakashvili had become parents the gender and birthdate of the baby were not announced 205 At the time of birth Saakashvili was imprisoned 205 Apart from his native Georgian Saakashvili speaks fluent English French Russian and Ukrainian 206 207 and has some command of Ossetian and Spanish 208 209 Some non Georgian sources spell Saakashvili s first name using the Russian spelling Mikhail In Georgia he is commonly known as Misha a hypocorism for Mikheil 210 Saakashvili enjoys exercise and has in the past often been seen in public on his bicycle 211 Appraisal editIn the 2010 study Competitive Authoritarianism Hybrid Regimes After the Cold War political scientists Steven Levitsky and Lucan A Way cite various media and human rights reports to describe Saakashvili s Georgia as a competitive authoritarian i e a formally democratic but essentially non democratic state 212 Saakashvili s government has been lauded by the World Bank for making striking improvements in the fight against corruption 213 214 In addition the US State Department noted 215 that in 2005 the government amended several laws and increased the amount of investigations and prosecutions reducing the amount of abuse and ill treatment in pre trial detention facilities The status of religious freedom also improved due to increased investigation and prosecution of those harassing followers of non traditional faiths 216 217 The scrupulousness of Patarkatsishvili s political opposition toward the Georgian president has been questioned by the Jamestown Foundation s political analyst Vladimir Socor who attributed the businessman s discontent to Saakashvili s anti corruption reforms which had severely curtailed Patarkatsishvili s scope for doing business in his accustomed post Soviet 1990s style ways 218 Patarkatsishvili who had fled the Russian authorities after allegations of fraud was called a state criminal by Saakashvili who accused him of treason while refusing to admit to any of his accusations 219 Saakashvili was portrayed by Cuban American Hollywood actor Andy Garcia in the 2010 Hollywood film 5 Days of War by Finnish American film director Renny Harlin 220 The film tells the story of Saakashvili and the events during the Russo Georgian War 221 Electoral history editElection Affiliation First round Second round Votes Percentage Position Votes Percentage Position 2004 United National Movement 1 890 739 96 24 1st 2008 United National Movement 1 060 042 54 73 1stNotes edit During the same press conference Saakashvili vowed to start a new stage of the struggle with young people unstained forces 106 According to Saakashvili We will definitely unite and we will fight for the victory of a new Ukraine for the people of Odesa for all other residents of Ukraine The fight continues and we will definitely win this fight 106 The decree was not made publicly available in accordance with the legislation on personal data protection 110 According to Saakashvili himself he entered Poland with his Ukrainian passport but it is unclear what passport he travelled on as his Ukraine passport was invalidated and the country he had travelled from the United States is not a signatory to the 1954 United Nations multilateral treaty Convention Relating to the Status of Stateless Persons granting international travel documents to stateless persons 114 On 21 June 2019 a Ukrainian court ruled that Saakashvili had resided in Ukraine from 23 February 2014 to 6 June 2019 even though after he was stripped of his citizenship under a decree by President Petro Poroshenko he was deported for more than a year 138 In Ukraine only parliament can appoint and dismiss government ministers 146 References edit a b c The President signed a decree on dismissal of Odesa Regional State Administration in Ukrainian president gov ua 9 November 2016 Poroshenko signs Odesa governor Saakashvili s resignation UNIAN 10 November 2016 Poroshenko appoints contest winner Stepanov as head of Odesa 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to Georgia over risk of political persecution media UNIAN 27 July 2017 Brenner Susan W 2014 Cyberthreats and the Decline of the Nation State Routledge p 69 ISBN 0415823765 Saakashvili faces 11 years of imprisonment NEWS AZ news az 8 August 2017 Archived from the original on 8 August 2017 Retrieved 8 August 2017 Ukraine Confirms Georgia Asked For Ex President Saakashvili s Extradition RadioFreeEurope RadioLiberty 5 September 2017 a b Saakashvili Convicted of Abuse of Power Sentenced in Absentia Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty 29 June 2018 Retrieved 6 January 2019 Ex president Saakashvili officially charged for illegal border crossing Agenda ge 20 October 2021 Retrieved 11 February 2023 Saakashvili Mikheil 6 March 2014 Mikheil Saakashvili The West must not appease Putin Washingtonpost com Retrieved 2 June 2015 Horowitz Jason 19 September 2014 Exile in Brooklyn With an Eye on Georgia The New York Times Retrieved 20 September 2014 Saakashvili Appointed as Head of Ukraine s Int l Advisory Council on Reforms Civil Georgia 13 February 2015 Archived from the original on 15 February 2015 Retrieved 14 February 2015 Ukaz prezidenta Ukrayini 301 2015 Pro prijnyattya do gromadyanstva Ukrayini Saakashvili M yak osobi prijnyattya yakoyi do gromadyanstva Ukrayini stanovit derzhavnij interes dlya Ukrayini Decree of the President of Ukraine 301 2015 On the acceptance into the Ukrainian community of Mikhail Saakashvili as an individual the acceptance of which is in the interest of the Ukraine of state interest in Ukrainian President gov ua 29 May 2015 Archived from the original on 2 June 2015 Retrieved 2 June 2015 Saakashvili appointed not hinder relations with Georgia Interfax Ukraine 2 June 2015 For friends all the enemies of the law as Poroshenko returns Ukraine to selective justice Ukrayinska Pravda in Ukrainian 27 July 2017 a b Ex Georgian President Stripped of Citizenship permanent dead link New York Times 4 December 2015 Koroli pozitivu v politici Saakashvili Sadovij i Moskal Kings of the Positive in politics Saakashvili Sadovyi and Moskal ICTV in Ukrainian 20 October 2015 Archived from the original on 5 August 2017 a b Ukrainian politics at the end of 2015 an unstable equilibrium Centre for Eastern Studies 30 December 2015 Odesa governor s deputy denies Saakashvili team s plans to create political party Interfax Ukraine 14 March 2016 Saakashvili denied the creation of a political party Hromadske tv in Ukrainian 14 March 2016 permanent dead link Difficulties of ambition Why young politicians can not agree on a single party Ukrayinska Pravda in Ukrainian 4 July 2016 Retrieved 5 August 2017 Saakashvili already sent letter of resignation Interfax Ukraine 7 November 2016 a b c Saakashvili resigning from post of Odesa Regional State Administration head Interfax Ukraine 7 November 2016 Saakashvili officially registered party BBC Ukrainian in Ukrainian 28 February 2017 Public Opinion Survey of Residents of Ukraine PDF International Republican Institute 5 May 2017 p 20 Ukraine president strips one time ally Saakashvili of citizenship Reuters 26 July 2017 Decree on stripping Saakashvili of Ukraine citizenship not to be published Bankova UNIAN 27 July 2017 Georgia ex leader Saakashvili stripped of Ukraine s citizenship BBC News BBC News 27 July 2017 Retrieved 27 July 2017 Saakashvili May Be Forced To Seek Asylum in United States Legislator Says The Financial The Financial 27 July 2017 Retrieved 27 July 2017 Ukraine strips one of its president s rivals of his citizenship The Economist 28 July 2017 Retrieved 29 July 2017 Georgia ex leader Saakashvili plans defiant return to Ukraine BBC News 28 July 2017 Saakashvili Mikheil 3 August 2017 The president took my passport away But I ll keep fighting for a modern Ukraine Kyiv Post kyivpost com Retrieved 8 August 2017 Saakashvili says he arrives in Poland from U S with Ukrainian passport Interfax Ukraine Kyiv Post 7 August 2017 Retrieved 8 August 2017 Taladaj Hubert 7 August 2017 Byly prezydent Gruzji w Polsce co dalej z Saakaszwilim EURACTIV euractiv pl Retrieved 8 August 2017 Former Georgian President Saakashvili leaves Poland media TASS news agency 8 August 2017 Retrieved 8 August 2017 Saakashvili claims Ukrainian foreign minister has Russian citizenship Interfax Ukraine 8 August 2017 Retrieved 8 August 2017 Saakashvili Says He Plans To Return To Ukraine Next Month Radio Free Europe 16 August 2017 Saakashvili planning to return to Ukraine next month UNIAN 16 August 2017 Saakashvili supporters push past border guards force entry into Ukraine France 24 10 August 2017 Retrieved 10 August 2017 Former governor Mikheil Saakashvili forces entry to Ukraine BBC 10 August 2017 Retrieved 10 August 2017 Saakashvili Says Hopes To Reenter Politics Unite Opposition in Ukraine Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty 12 September 2017 Retrieved 5 December 2017 UPDATES Poroshenko brands Saakashvili criminal for breaking through border Sep 11 2017 11 September 2017 Retrieved 5 December 2017 Saakashvili ta prikordonniki oformlyuyut peretin kordonu BBC Ukrayina 12 September 2017 Retrieved 12 September 2017 Saakashvili Rallies Supporters in Western Ukraine Vows To Help Solve Country s Political Crisis Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty 13 September 2017 Retrieved 5 December 2017 Sud oshtrafuvav Saakashvili 22 September 2017 Retrieved 5 December 2017 via www bbc com a b Occupation of the TV Why do politicians become TV presenters Ukrayinska Pravda in Ukrainian 12 February 2019 From Tbilisi to a tent What next for the Saakashvili circus BBC News 7 December 2017 Saakashvili Detained Home Searched By Ukraine s Security Service RadioFreeEurope RadioLiberty Retrieved 5 December 2017 Saakashvili detained in Kiev MP TASS news agency Retrieved 5 December 2017 a b Saakashvili Ex Georgia leader detained by police in Kiev BBC News 8 December 2017 Saakashvili pomistili do izolyatora timchasovogo trimannya Lucenko Saakashvili was placed in the Lutsenko detention center Ukrayinska Pravda in Ukrainian 8 December 2017 Retrieved 8 December 2017 Saakashvili announces indefinite hunger strike lawyer UNIAN 9 December 2017 Ukrainian Court Releases Saakashvili From Detention RadioFreeEurope RadioLiberty Retrieved 11 December 2017 Ukraine Bans Saakashvili Until 2021 Rferl org 21 February 2018 Retrieved on 9 May 2018 Bennetts Marc 12 February 2018 Georgia s former president deported from Ukraine to Poland The Guardian Retrieved 12 February 2018 Michail Saaksjvili vestigit zich in Nederland na uitzetting Oekraine NOS 14 February 2018 Retrieved 14 February 2018 Georgia s Saakashvili has Ukrainian citizenship restored bbc com 28 May 2019 Retrieved 28 May 2019 Kyiv Court Rules Saakashvili Eligible To Run For Parliament Radio Free Europe 21 June 2019 a b Sakvarelidze tells why Saakashvili refuses to head UDAR glavcom ua in Ukrainian 7 June 2019 Retrieved 22 April 2020 Elektoralna pam yat ukr vote a b CEC counts 100 percent of vote in Ukraine s parliamentary elections Ukrinform 26 July 2019 Rezultaty vneocherednyh vyborov narodnyh deputatov Ukrainy 2019 Results of the extraordinary elections of the People s Deputies of Ukraine 2019 Ukrayinska Pravda in Russian 21 July 2019 Saakashvili zaklikav prihilnikiv viddati golosi za Slugu narodu LB ua in Ukrainian 19 July 2019 Retrieved 20 July 2019 Saakashvili says he received offer from Zelensky to become deputy PM on reforms in Ukraine Interfax Ukraine 22 April 2020 Saakashvili Georgia s ex leader set to become Ukraine deputy PM www aljazeera com Retrieved 25 April 2020 Saakashvili s return to Ukrainian government stalls amid fierce opposition Kyiv Post 1 May 2020 Political Explainer Ukraine s System of Government voxukraine org GDDG UNM Trade Accusations Civil Georgia 5 September 2016 Retrieved 11 February 2023 Saakashvili Tells UNM Campaign Rally via Video Link Election Victory Inevitable Civil Georgia 26 September 2016 Retrieved 11 February 2023 After Leaked Audio Recording Security Service Launches Coup Plot Probe Civil Georgia 27 September 2016 Retrieved 11 February 2023 UNM MP Survives Car Blast in Tbilisi Center Civil Georgia 4 October 2016 Retrieved 11 February 2023 UNM Weighs its Options for Political Struggle as Saakashvili Calls for Boycotting MP Runoffs Civil Georgia 10 October 2016 Retrieved 11 February 2023 Saakashvili No Desire to Have Anything in Common with One or Two Whimsical Persons from UNM Civil Georgia 10 November 2016 Retrieved 11 February 2023 Amid Disagreement on New Chairperson UNM Plans Congress in January Civil Georgia 1 December 2016 Retrieved 11 February 2023 Intra Party Crisis Widens as UNM Approaches Party Convention Civil Georgia 24 December 2016 Retrieved 11 February 2023 UNM Leadership Disputes Upcoming Congress Legitimacy Civil Georgia 5 January 2017 Retrieved 11 February 2023 United National Movement Splits Civil Georgia 12 January 2017 Retrieved 11 February 2023 Civil Ge Gigi Ugulava on Past Mistakes Political Plans Differences between UNM European Georgia old civil ge UNM Elects New Chairman Governing Body Civil Georgia 25 March 2019 Retrieved 28 March 2019 Former President Saakashvili pledges to return to Georgia for upcoming local elections Agenda ge 6 September 2021 Retrieved 14 April 2022 He is in Ukraine he has not left Ukraine Mdinaradze on Mikheil Saakashvili Mtavari Arkhi 1 October 2021 Retrieved 30 September 2022 Fake Or Fact Georgia Debates Ex President Mikheil Saakashvili s Reported Return Current Time TV 1 October 2021 Retrieved 6 January 2022 Georgian special forces dispatched to Batumi in operation to detain ex President Saakashvili Report az 1 October 2021 Retrieved 6 January 2022 Timeline Saakashvili Imprisonment amp Hunger Strike Civil Georgia 30 November 2021 Retrieved 25 March 2022 Zurabishvili Vows to Never Pardon Saakashvili Civil ge 1 October 2021 Georgian president says Saakashvili is special prisoner but won t be pardoned Reuters 3 November 2021 a b Jailed on hunger strike and humiliated on camera how Georgia treats its ex president Natalia Antelava the Guardian 19 November 2021 Retrieved 21 November 2021 Hunger striking former Georgian leader needs hospital treatment doctor Reuters 10 October 2021 Retrieved 10 October 2021 UNM members call for internal election in bid to oust Nika Melia Agenda ge 19 November 2021 Retrieved 9 November 2022 a b c Former Georgian president Saakashvili ends 50 day prison hunger strike after transfer to military hospital Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 21 November 2021 State Inspector s Service to launch probe into alleged ex president s inhuman treatment 1TV საგამოძიები სამსახური მიხეილ სააკაშვილის საქმესთან დაკავშირებით განცხადებას ავრცელებს Investigation Service releases a statement regarding Mikheil Saakashvili s case in Georgian GHN News Agency 2 June 2022 Archived from the original on 2 June 2022 Georgia s Ex President Saakashvili To End 50 Day Hunger Strike Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty 20 November 2021 Retrieved 21 November 2021 Georgia s ex president Saakashvili needs treatment abroad doctor says Reuters 12 December 2021 Retrieved 12 December 2021 მიხეილ სააკაშვილი გორის ჰოსპიტალიდან გაიტაცეს ნიკა გვარამია Mikheil Saakashvili was kidnapped from Gori Hospital Nika Gvaramia mtavari tv in Georgian 30 December 2021 მიხეილ სააკაშვილი რუსთავის ციხეში გადაიყვანეს Mikheil Saakashvili was transferred to Rustavi prison mtavari tv in Georgian 30 December 2021 The Daily Beat 24 January 25 January 2023 nikoladze Tatia 1 February 2023 Unethical picture Saakashvili trial continues with his remote participation Judge Giorgi Arevadze did not postpone Mikheil Saakashvili s sentence mtavari tv 6 February 2023 Mikheil Saakashvili Poland offers medics to examine Georgia ex leader BBC News 13 March 2023 Retrieved 20 December 2023 I m a Georgian political prisoner My death means embracing the Kremlin Newsweek 8 August 2023 Retrieved 24 August 2023 Georgia s security service accuses Ukrainian official of plotting coup al jazeera Retrieved 19 September 2023 Zelensky says he will bring Ukrainian citizen Saakashvili back to country using various means VIDEO Agenda ge 3 October 2021 Retrieved 30 September 2022 Amnesty International on Twitter Georgia ex President Saakashvili 5th week of hunger strike violently transferred to prison hospital Amnesty International 9 November 2021 via Twitter Treatment of Former President of Georgia Mikheil Saakashvili United States Department of State Retrieved 21 November 2021 Pociej Aleksander et al 27 June 2022 Mikhail Saakashvili needs medical help Written declaration No 748 PDF Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly 15581 Archived from the original PDF on 29 June 2022 European Parliament approves resolution on implementation of Georgia EU Association Agreement Agenda ge 14 December 2022 Retrieved 14 December 2022 Video of emaciated Mikheil Saakashvili prompts stand off between Georgia and Ukraine Financial Times 5 July 2023 Retrieved 5 July 2023 a b Zelenskyy urges Georgia to transfer Saakashvili to Ukraine orders MFA to express protest Interfax Ukraine 3 July 2023 Retrieved 6 July 2023 Minister of Justice Insists on Saakashvili Self Harm as EU Parliament Plans Urgent Debate 1 February 2023 Justice Minister Ukrainian President s statement on ex Pres Saakashvili unfair insulting Agenda ge PM Georgia would be at war if imprisoned former President Saakashvili was in power Agenda ge 27 April 2022 Retrieved 23 August 2022 The European Parliament directly admitted that Saakashvili is their agent and they are doing everything to save him Garibashvili Mtavar Arkhi 12 March 2023 Retrieved 23 August 2023 Justice Minister Strasbourg Court Rejects Request to Transfer Saakashvili to Warsaw for Treatment Civil Georgia 12 May 2023 Retrieved 23 August 2023 Tbilisi City Court sentences in absentia ex President Saakashvili to 6 years The Guardian 28 June 2018 Retrieved 26 July 2022 Chivers C J 8 November 2007 Georgia Leader Declares Emergency Over Protest The New York Times Saidazimova Gulnoza 1 July 2005 Georgia Opposition Lawmakers Protest Violence Against Demonstrators Rferl Retrieved 7 January 2013 Overview of Corruption and Anti Corruption in Georgia PDF Transparency International a b Saakashvili recommends mud bath to opponent leaves debate Democracy amp Freedom Watch 28 February 2012 Retrieved 27 July 2022 Saakashvili attending second trial on embezzlement of state funds Agenda ge 2 December 2021 Retrieved 27 July 2022 მიხეილ სააკაშვილი თანამდებობის პირის ქონებრივი მდგომარეობის დეკლარაცია Mikheil Saakashvili Asset Declaration PDF in Georgian Institute for Development of Freedom of Information 14 May 2011 Archived from the original PDF on 26 April 2012 Retrieved 5 December 2011 Saakashvili and his girlfriend from the Servant of the People recorded a video in case of arrest Ukrayinska Pravda in Ukrainian 1 October 2021 Yasko on relations with Saakashvili He is grateful to his Ex wife but it is time to move forward Tablo ID in Ukrainian 2 October 2021 a b Saakashvili s official spouse demands his release from prison Interfax Ukraine Retrieved 1 February 2023 მიხეილ სააკაშვილი ელის მარია სააკაშვილზე ჩემი ყველაზე საყვარელი გოგო და უმცროსი შვილი RFE RL in Georgian 31 December 2021 Retrieved 1 February 2023 a b His Ukrainian continuation Yasko announced that she gave birth for Saakashvili Tablo ID in Ukrainian 1 June 2023 Retrieved 1 June 2023 Profile Mikhail Saakashvili BBC News 25 January 2004 Retrieved 9 August 2008 Barry Ellen 2008 Mikheil Saakashvili The New York Times Retrieved 9 August 2008 Murray Don 29 February 2008 Can bountiful Georgia escape the Russian bear CBC Archived from the original on 2 May 2008 Retrieved 9 August 2008 Smock John 13 August 2004 As prospect of South Ossetian conflict grows Georgia prepares to send troops to Iraq EurasiaNet Archived from the original on 11 May 2008 Retrieved 9 August 2008 Orlov Alexander Arseniyevich December 2008 The Echo of Tskhinval International Affairs 54 6 Minneapolis Moscow 68 ISSN 0130 9641 Horowitz Jason 19 September 2014 Mikheil Saakashvili Georgia s Ex President Plots Return From Williamsburg Brooklyn The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 6 April 2019 Levitsky Steven amp Lucan A Way 2010 Competitive Authoritarianism Hybrid Regimes After the Cold War New York Cambridge University Press p 227 ISBN 978 0 521 70915 6 Anderson James Gray Cheryl 26 July 2006 Anticorruption in Transition Who is Succeeding and Why The World Bank WB Reports on Largest Reduction of Corruption in Georgia Civil 1 July 2001 Archived from the original on 13 August 2008 Retrieved 7 January 2013 Country Report on Human Rights Practices in Georgia US Bureau of Democracy Human Rights and Labor 8 March 2006 Retrieved 1 February 2013 Human Rights Overview Georgia Human Rights Watch 18 January 2006 Archived from the original on 21 January 2006 Georgia International Religious Freedom Report 2005 U S Department of State 2006 Retrieved 2 June 2015 Socor Vladimir Badri Patarkatsishvili From Russian Businessman to Georgian Presidential Claimant The Jamestown Foundation Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume 4 Issue 237 21 December 2007 Retrieved 25 February 2011 Interfax News headlines Interfax com Retrieved 2 June 2015 dead link Georgia 2010 IMDb Retrieved 21 January 2009 Movie star plays Georgian leader BBC News October 2009 Retrieved 22 October 2009 Further reading editAsmus Ronald A Little War that Shook the World Georgia Russia and the Future of the West NYU 2010 ISBN 978 0 230 61773 5 Savodnik Peter January 2009 Essay Georgian Roulette Mikheil Saakashvili beckons from the brink Harper s Magazine Vol 318 no 1904 pp 36 42 External links editMikheil Saakashvili at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp News from Wikinews nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote Mikheil Saakashvili on Facebook Mikheil Saakashvili s channel on YouTube Mikheil Saakashvili Full Biography 1st inauguration of Mikheil Saakashvili 2004 2nd inauguration of Mikheil Saakashvili 2008 Political offices Preceded byNino Burjanadze Acting President of Georgia2004 2007 Succeeded byNino BurjanadzeActing President of Georgia2008 2013 Succeeded byGiorgi Margvelashvili Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mikheil Saakashvili amp oldid 1220198570, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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