Lagniappe
Galina
Ivanova : Opposition
to Georgian election results
TBILISI, Georgia, January 13, 2007: Tens of thousands of opposition
protesters in rallied against presidential poll winner Mikhail
Saakashvili on Sunday alleging vote fraud.
Opposition leader Levan Gachechiladze called for a second round
of elections. Gachechiladze came second in the January 5 vote
to the incumbent Saakashvili, who was the outright winner in
the first round with 53.47 percent, according to final results
issued by the Central Elections Commission earlier on Sunday.
The opposition has accused the authorities of rigging the vote
in favour of Saakashvili, a pro-Western reformer who led a popular
revolt in 2003 but whose popularity has waned because of continued
high levels of poverty.
Salome Zurabishvili, another opposition leader and a former
foreign minister, called on foreign leaders to boycott Saakashvili's
inauguration ceremony. Opposition leaders billed the rally as
a show of force against Saakashvili, who was first elected with
a sweeping majority in January 2004 in this former Soviet republic.
The Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE),
the main election monitoring group, said that despite some irregularities,
the election had largely met democratic standards. The Central
Election Commission said the courts were considering a number
of complaints regarding the election, and that so far more than
33,000 votes had been declared invalid due to irregularities.
The presidential election was called a year early in response
to violent unrest in November, which dented Saakashvili's image
as a democratic reformer in this strategic corner of the former
Soviet Union. US-backed Saakashvili now has a new five-year mandate
to pursue radical reforms to transform Georgia's economy. He
is also wants Georgia to join NATO and the European Union.
A flamboyant and multilingual politician, Saakashvili has won
plaudits for pulling Georgia out of years of economic chaos and
political instability. But, while the opposition backs his pro-Western
course, it accuses him of authoritarian tendencies and forgetting
impoverished Georgians who have been left behind in free-market
reforms. Addressing those complaints, Saakashvili told reporters
on Saturday that he aims to eliminate poverty. He added that
he wanted to improve relations with neighboring Russia.
Angered by Tbilisi's overtures to the West and its NATO ambitions,
Moscow has imposed economic sanctions on Georgia. It also supports
armed rebels controlling the Georgian separatist regions of Abkhazia
and South Ossetia.
Galina
Ivanova of Russian Election 2008 blog. Petroleumworld
does not necessarily share these views.
Editor's
Note: This commentary was originally published in Russian Election
2008, on January 2008 ( http://russianelection2008.blogspot.com
). Petroleumworld reprint this article in the interest of our
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Petroleumworld
News 01/29/08
Copyright© 2008
Galina Ivanova.
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