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Oligarchs vie for power in Georgia
By Simon Whelan
24 November 2007
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President Mikhail Saakashvilis attempts to outflank the
Georgian United Opposition are not running according to plan.
Commentators are even beginning to question his ability to salvage
his political career.
By bringing forward the Presidential elections from 2009 to
January 5 of next year, Saakashvili calculated that a fractious
opposition would neither be able to agree upon a candidate, nor
mount a creditable campaign against him. But nine of the ten party
Georgian United Opposition group have supported local businessman
Levan Gechelidze as their candidate in the presidential election.
Billionaire Georgian tycoon Badri Patarkatsishvili has announced
his plans to stand independently.
After meeting government representative Nino Burjanadze on
November 19, an opposition spokesperson told reporters that unless
the demands of the opposition are met, they will boycott the elections
and return to street demonstrations.
The recent events in Georgia, which began on November 7, have
stripped back whatever remained of the democratic veneer of the
so-called Rose Revolution that brought the Saakashvili
clique to power.
Faced with an opposition demonstration numbering in the tens
of thousands, Saakashvili unleashed his riot police to beat the
demonstrators. Some 550 people required hospital treatment for
wounds meted out by the security forces. On the same day Special
Forces raided the Imeldi broadcasting premises, and set about
beating up journalists and physically destroying the stations
ability to broadcast.
After dispersing the crowds with rubber bullets, water cannon
and baton rounds, Saakashvili announced a state of emergency with
immediate effect. All civil liberties were suspended and all but
pro-Saakashvili media outlets silenced. It was during the state
of emergency, with total control over national media outlets,
that he announced an early presidential election while claiming
that the opposition was in league with Russia.
Saakashvili was brought to power in 2003 in what amounted to
a political coup engineered in Washington by the Bush administration.
It was executed in Tbilisi by right wing American NGOs and their
activists, some of them veterans from the so-called Colour Revolutions
in Serbia and the Ukraine, who ensured that their mana Harvard-educated
lawyerwas brought to power.
With the completion of the crucial Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil
pipeline only months away, Washington wanted to place in power
an administration that could provide security for the energy conduit
that runs beneath Georgian soil. Eduard Shevardnadze was deemed
insufficiently aggressive towards Russia and therefore incapable
of wresting back the two breakaway Georgian republics of Abkhazia
and South Ossetia, which are supported by Moscow and are close
to the route taken by the pipeline.
Not only was the Saakashvili clique familiar with power after
serving under Shevardnadze, more crucially they were fully prepared
to transform Georgia into a pro-American outpost on Russias
south-westerly border.
In the intervening four years of Saakashvilis rule, he
has functioned as the head of a comprador bourgeoisie totally
dependent on the backing of the US and other Western powers. Georgia
has been transformed into a free market trade zone with minimal
taxes on investment and the rich. A program of wholesale privatisation
and deregulation has won plaudits from the World Bank.
Once elected president in early 2004, Saakashvili quickly reverted
to the undemocratic and authoritarian methods utilised by his
mentor Shevardnadze. The opposition to his regime was harried
at every turn with activists imprisoned on flimsy charges and
anti-government demonstrations violently broken up. This did not
stop a steady stream of top Republicans, including President Bush
himself, from visiting Tbilisi and gloating over having engineered
a regime change on Russias border. Bush famously declared
Saakashvilis government as a beacon of democracy.
Recent events have demonstrated that western-backing alone
does not guarantee Saakashvili can maintain his grip on power.
Georgia has been destabilised by an explosive combination of external
and internal factors. The regime of President Putin in Moscow
has responded to the Saakashvili administration with a series
of provocations of its own. The protracted conflict between Moscow
and Tbilisi over Abkhazia and South Ossetia has intensified recently.
During the state of emergency the Georgian government accused
Russian armed forces of trying to take advantage of the situation
and move extra troops and equipment into Abkhazia.
In response to the expulsion of Russian diplomats from Georgia
following accusations of espionage, Putin immediately placed an
indefinite embargo on Georgian exports to Russian markets. The
ban covering citrus fruits, wines, mineral water and tobacco in
Georgias largest export market has had a devastating impact
in a country where half the population live and work in agrarian
areas. Putin also ordered the repatriation of thousands of Georgian
workers from Russia. The remittances sent home to Georgian families
represented a not inconsiderable part of Georgian national income.
Such measures have compounded the wretched social conditions
of Georgian workers and peasants, already declining precipitously
because of the free-market measures enacted by the Saakashvili
government.
The fall in living standards and social conditions has seen
Saakashvilis approval rating drop by more than half, from
90 percent to just 40 percent in the past four years. One third
of the population live on or beneath the poverty line, in stark
contrast to the enrichment of the Tbilisi-based elite.
Tbilisi is currently experiencing an unprecedented construction
boom, but Salome Zourabichvili, who is running as the deputy to
Leven Gechelidze in the presidential election, told the Economist
magazine that Georgia resembles nothing so much as a Potemkin
country. Beyond the new international hotels, boutiques
and tourist attractions in the capital the lives of ordinary Georgians
remain squalid. The countrys manufacturing sector is in
ruins and scrap metal remains one of the countrys chief
foreign exports.
The United Opposition has sought to cynically manipulate popular
hostility to Saakashvilis rule, but it is led by elements
that actively assisted and even financed his rise to power only
four years ago that have fallen out bitterly with their former
leader. Such figures include Levan Gechelidze and Badri Patarkatsishvili,
who are both standing in the upcoming presidential election early
next year.
Saakashvili has tried to portray the opposition as a Russian
creation, but there is no evidence of this. The western media,
including the Guardian, New York Times, Wall
Street Journal and the Washington Post, have rejected
his claims, as have spokesmen for the Bush administration and
the European Union.
The major issue uniting the opposition is the fact that Saakashvilis
monopoly on power excludes other Georgian oligarchs from influence.
His policies have also impacted negatively on their business interests.
Gechelidze, for example, is a former financier of Saakashvili.
But he relies on exports of wine and spirits to Russia. While
the social layer he represents cannot be described as pro-Russian,
they do want a less antagonistic relationship with Moscow in order
to open up borders again to trade.
Patarkatsishvili, on the other hand represents a section of
the Georgian bourgeoisie who watched from the sidelines during
the ousting of Shevardnadze because of the favourable treatment
they received from his administration. He established relations
with the Saakashvili Administration once he came to power, but
these took a turn for the worse when Georgias richest man
felt that the governments highly selective anti-corruption
drive was treading on his toes. Relations between the two went
into meltdown when former Saakashvili Defence Minister Irakli
Okruashvili accused the president of ordering the extermination
of the tycoon.
Unlike the faction currently led by Gechelidze, Patarkatsishvili
would be unlikely to seek more relaxed relations with Moscow.
He is a close business associate of the exiled Russian oligarch
Boris Berezovsky, who has called for a revolution to depose Putin.
Patarkatsishvilis vast wealth, estimated at $9 billion,
is not tied up in Georgia, but is mostly in international investments.
Claims that he is a Russian stooge are most clearly undermined
by his close relations with Rupert Murdochs News Corporation,
to whom he recently sold off a controlling share of Imeldi for
one year. Martin Pompadur, on behalf of News Corp, told Agence
France-Presse, To allege that News Corp. is involved in
a Russian-backed coup in Georgia is beyond ludicrous.
Imeldi is still off the air. Deputy Prosecutor General Nika
Gvaramia has stated that the accusations against Patarkatsishvili
do not extend to Imeldi and once the television station provides
guarantees that it operates independently of Patarkatsishvili,
it can reopen. But this could take months, keeping Imeldi
silent during the election campaign.
The United Opposition is equally as keen as Patarkatsishvili
to cultivate favourable relations with Murdoch. Imeldi is the
only major news channel not controlled by the government. David
Usupashvili of the United Opposition said without Imeldi the
upcoming elections would be nothing but a show. Gechelidze
has said he will only stand if Imeldi is back on air by
November 25. If not, then the opposition threatened that street
demonstrations will begin again.
Regardless of differences over relations with Russia, as is
evidenced by their continuing dialogue with US representatives
like Matt Bryza, the opposition maintains a pro-Western orientation
and must seek the benediction of Washington and to maintain the
good will of the international investment markets. Washington
and the European Union made condemnatory noises over the state
of emergency and NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer
said that it might set back Georgias application for membership.
But thus far, the western powers and the US in particular have
maintained their support for Saakashvili and continue to view
him as an important ally against Russia, a guarantor of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan
pipeline and a military partner in the occupation of Iraq.
See Also:
Worsening conflict between
Russia and Georgia driven by Washington-Moscow rivalries
[30 October 2007]
Putin in Tehran: US-Russia
rift widens
[18 October 2007]
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