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  • Information Superhighway Develops New Georgian Lane

    The Georgian Times
    2007.11.12 12:22

    Personal Internet Commentary on Current Events

    You can say what you like on the internet. Some interesting
    unsolicited material has been circulating as a result of the current
    situation in Georgia. The political crisis has prompted people to send
    e-mails to THE GEORGIAN TIMES , and posts to various internet sites,
    adding their twopennyworth on the unfolding events.

    Various Georgians around the world have received an invitation to sign
    an online petition entitled ?Stop abuses by the government of
    Georgia.? This was begun by US based Georgian human rights activist
    Anna Dolidze and is targeted at the Government of the United States,
    the United Nations Organization, the Council of Europe and the
    European Union. The petition describes the actions of the government
    in regard to the demonstrations and calls for the international
    community to intervene in the crisis, condemn ?massive violation of
    human rights?, stop the ?persecution of opposition members?, pressure
    the government to cancel emergency rule, compel the government to
    ?release political prisoners? and satisfy the appeal for peaceful
    dialogue. The petition is hosted by the independent international
    petition hosting forum www.gopetition.com. As of 18:00 on Saturday 10
    November it had attracted nearly 4,000 signatures, some of them well
    known names in Georgia such as Shalva Natelashvili, Jondi Baghaturia,
    Irakli kakabadze.

    Another item doing the rounds through Skype is an online poll. This is
    a rather odd item because there is no indication to the outside
    observer of what it is about. It is hosted by free poll website
    http://poll.pollcode.com/eBF and simply says in a red box, ?2008
    Parlamentarian (sic) Elections (Spring-Fall)?, giving users the option
    of clicking on the spring or fall box. There is no reference to
    Georgia. By 18:00 on Saturday only 27 people had voted, of which 18
    favoured spring and 9 fall (autumn). The poll has been overtaken by
    the decision to hold the Presidential election in January but it does
    warn users at the bottom, ?Poll results are subject to error and are
    for entertainment only.?

    Photographs are also being sent around. One received by GEORGIAN
    TIMES, without any accompanying text, showed Avtandil Jorbenadze,
    former Minister of State under Shevardnadze being beaten with a stick
    by a man wearing black civilian clothes, but having a balaclava on his
    head masking his face. The Flickr site (www.flickr.com) also has a
    number of photos of the police action against the demonstrators. The
    international YouTube video site has several entries on the current
    crisis. One shows the police using tear gas and another the
    demonstrations in Zugdidi, subtitled in English. Ironically the source
    of many of these is ?Russia Today.?

    Bloggers have of course been busy. The ?Resistance Georgia? blog
    (http://resistancegeorgia.blogspot.com) has reported that Levan
    Mikeladze, Georgia?s ambassador to the Swiss Confederation and Head of
    the Mission of Georgia to International Organizations in Geneva, has
    resigned from his post as he can no longer support a government which
    uses force on the opposition. Joshua Keating, an editor of the journal
    ?Foreign Policy?, writes a blog at http://blog.foreignpolicy.com.
    Thursday?s entry is entitled ?The sad end of the Rose Revolution? and
    includes quotes by people who were beaten by police. This identifies
    the people wearing black clothes and balaclavas as police. Another
    blogsite called ?BoingBoing? (www.boingboing.net) has a different take
    on the conflict. A posting on November 8 displays a photograph of a
    riot policeman in a mask. The accompanying text is: ?The Rose
    Revolution in the former Soviet state of Georgia is collapsing under
    phalances (sic) of riot-cops. This is distressing, but also
    fascinating -- who knew that the Georgian riot cop standard issue
    included a freaky white Mickey Mouse mask?? The mask does indeed
    resemble the face of Mickey Mouse, the well known icon of American and
    pro-American culture.

    TOL Georgia (http://blogs.tol.org) carries an article by ?jibs?
    headlined ?Georgia: Democracy in Crisis.? This is one of a number of
    articles under the heading ?Saakashvili? that have been building up
    during the week. One of these directly quotes the GEORGIAN TIMES.
    Another blogging website is Global Voices
    (www.globalvoicesonline.org). This is a ?non-profit global citizens?
    media project founded at Harvard Law School?s Berkman Center for
    Internet and Society, a research think-tank focused on the Internet?s
    impact on society.? A post from Wednesday by Onnik Krikorian is
    entitled: ?Georgia ? End of a Fairy Tale?? This is a summary of blogs
    >From various sources. One of the most interesting is from an Armenian
    blogger on Unzipped: ?Just listened to President Saakashvili?s speech
    on the latest developments in Georgia, involving the forceful
    dispersal of the opposition demonstration. He put the blame on Russia
    again. I think Russians need to pack on and leave somewhere towards
    South America, so that they are not blamed for Georgia?s internal
    affairs. How can all this be blamed on Russia? Are those 70,000 people
    that showed up in the first day of the protests ALL Russian puppets?
    Long live our saviour and protector against the Russian dark magic!?
    The Global Voices blog however also directs readers to pro-Saakashvili
    comments on other blogs, such as ?There are huge possibilities for
    good in this country and I hope that the President, Saakashvili, is
    smart enough to be able to quell this thing without having to resort
    to Soviet era tactics of repression. I will be an unequivocal
    supporter of him if he can figure out a way to address the core of
    what the protestors are saying.?

    Internet contributions are not usually moderated and therefore have
    much more scope to be opinionated. But perhaps the most remarkable of
    the internet comments come from a source designed to be entirely
    neutral. The online encyclopedia Wikipedia already has an entry on the
    ?2007 Georgian Demonstrations?. It does warn readers that this is a
    current event and that the content of the article may change as it
    unfolds. But it gives a full account of events so far and now purports
    to be a finished article. It includes a timeline of the events leading
    up to the demonstrations and some international reaction. Encyclopedia
    articles about historic events are usually not written or published
    until well after the event, when hindsight has lent a different layer
    of meaning to what happened. An encyclopedia article written about
    something while it is taking place will be a valuable addition to the
    yet-to-be-written history of this period.

    Internet activity gives people who have no other outlet the chance to
    express their views to the world. Every view under the sun is
    therefore likely to appear. The tone of the internet activity visible
    so far is resolutely opposed to the government?s actions against
    demonstrators, and its arguments are based primarily on this
    occurrence rather the wider range of concerns expressed by government
    and opposition and in print media.

    Rumwold Leigh for The Georgian Times
    2007.11.12 12:22

    http://www.geotimes.ge/index.php?m=home&amp ;newsid=7747
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