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  • Saakashvili: georgia now a "model" country

    SAAKASHVILI: GEORGIA NOW A "MODEL" COUNTRY

    Eurasianet
    February 11, 2005

    Declaring Georgia "a proper state," President Mikheil Saakashvili
    delivered his annual state of the nation speech to parliament on
    February 10. The upbeat speech was the Georgian leader's first
    detailed public statement on government policy since the death of
    Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania, a leading architect of the country's
    reform program.

    Saakashvili asserted that the 2003 Rose Revolution that brought his
    administration to power had begun to accomplish its goals. "Georgia
    was a failed state, disintegrated, demoralized and humiliated. It was
    a country that had lost all attributes of statehood," Saakashvili
    said in condemning the administration of his predecessor, Eduard
    Shevardnadze. In contrast, Saakashvili continued, Georgia in 2005 "is
    a model country where every program is working in a model way."

    The president cited improved tax revenue collection and a new tax
    code, an enlarged state budget, regular payment of government
    salaries and pensions, and a crackdown on corruption as among his
    administration's successes in 2004. Increased tax flow and the timely
    payment of state salaries and pensions – "the one area in which we
    can claim success" -- prompted the president to nominate Finance
    Minister Zurab Noghaideli for prime minister, he said. "When a person
    works so well, he should be promoted," commented Saakashvili. The
    president officially presented Noghaideli as his candidate for prime
    minister on February 11. A special session of parliament is expected
    to convene on either February 17 or February 18 to vote on Noghaideli
    and other proposed cabinet changes, according to Speaker Nino
    Burjanadze. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    The February 1 explosion in Gori and the February 3 death of Zhvania
    have shown "that we can deal with any unexpected changes, tragedies
    and terrorist acts and remain strong, so that we still stand firm on
    our own two feet," Saakashvili said. [For background see the Eurasia
    Insight archive]. "We are a country that has to reclaim the most
    attractive part of its territory and which faces the strongest and
    most aggressive - perhaps not the strongest but certainly the most
    aggressive - forces in the world."

    Those "forces" were not named, but political observers believe
    Saakashvili was referring to Russia, which has had a prickly
    relationship with Georgia since the 1991 collapse of the Soviet
    Union. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. In contrast
    to Russia, Saakashvili characterized Georgia's relations with
    neighbors Armenia, Azerbaijan and Turkey as "idyllic."

    Saakashvili stated that he is ready to pay an official visit to
    Moscow to "once again extend the hand of friendship to [Russian
    President] Vladimir Putin, which . . . has been left hanging in the
    air," but added that Russia must be prepared to compromise on issues
    that divide the two states.

    Georgian Deputy Foreign Minister Merab Antadze announced on February
    10 that talks in Tbilisi on a framework agreement with Russia have
    not been successful, with Russian insistence that Georgia promise to
    ban foreign military bases from its territory proving a key stumbling
    block. Separate talks are continuing in Tbilisi about the removal of
    two Russian military bases from outside the Georgian towns of
    Akhalkalaki and Batumi. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
    archive].

    On the domestic front, electoral changes could soon be in the offing.
    Georgia's next parliament, due for election in 2008, could be a
    smaller, two-chamber body with 150 members. Deputies would still be
    elected according to a combination of single-mandate constituencies
    and party lists, but "first past the post" seats would be decreased
    from 75 to 50. Failing to make this change, the president said, would
    "be humiliating" for voters who voted for the legislative overhaul in
    a 2003 referendum. At the same time, Georgia's cities could also see
    their mayors elected, rather than appointed by the president.
    Candidate cities for such a changeover were not named, but the
    president stated that he expects the reform to happen within the
    year. No timeline was set for Parliament's makeover.

    Saakashvili also announced his intention to overhaul the country's
    corruption-ridden, poorly financed education system, but provided no
    details. The president emphasized that the judicial system, another
    area where change has come slowly, should acquire "independent
    courts," but cautioned that "a dry place cannot exist in the middle
    of a swamp." Saakashvili placed heavy emphasis on the need for
    political unity. He named the country's European orientation, its
    willingness to cooperate with international organizations and its
    refusal to allow foreign bases on Georgian soil or tolerate foreign
    interference in its internal affairs as among the tenets that all
    political parties should accept. "No political party or person should
    overstep this mark," the president said, adding that those parties
    that fail to support these principles should "automatically be
    declared outside the law."

    David Gamkrelidze, leader of the opposition New Rights-Industrialists
    coalition, termed the president's remarks "a well-performed show."
    Gamkrelidze charged that Saakashvili had overlooked such problems as
    price increases, unemployment, human rights violations, illegal
    arrests and the August 2004 "military campaign fiasco" in South
    Ossetia. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    The comments by Gamkrelidze, who also called on parliament to create
    an independent commission to investigate Zhvania's death, drew a
    swift response from the president. "The only purpose of this
    statement was to make people remember that it was Gamkrelidze who
    made the most noise today," Saakashvili said.

    --Boundary_(ID_Cu10hdLhNRNAbW7b5Ny/ZQ)--
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