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TBILISI: NGO accuses Georgian president's uncle of dubious deals

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  • TBILISI: NGO accuses Georgian president's uncle of dubious deals

    Imedi TV, Georgia
    Oct 12 2007


    NGO accuses Georgian president's uncle of dubious deals



    [Presenter] Freedom Institute [NGO] has accused [Georgian] President
    [Mikheil Saakashvili's] uncle Temur Alasania of corrupt deals.
    Members of the NGO devoted a special meeting to this issue. [News
    programme] Kronika's correspondent Tea Sichinava attended the
    briefing. She is live on the air now. Tea, what specific accusation
    is at issue?

    [Correspondent] The Georgian president's uncle Temur Alasania has
    invested money in the gold business with former Russian Energy
    Minister Sergey Generalov's support and money on the territory
    disputed by Armenia and Azerbaijan. Freedom Institute member Levan
    Gogichaishvili submitted this information some time ago referring to
    an article by John Helmer. We were told here that John Helmer is an
    expert who was previously Jimmy Carter's assistant. This article
    provides quite a lot of details of the situation in Armenia around
    one of the gold companies and mentions Temur Alasania and Sergey
    Generalov together. Levan Gogichaishvili has described this as double
    standards, which he said has angered Azerbaijan most of all. He also
    noted that the current events have the same overtones for Azerbaijan
    as the inflow of Russian capital into Nagornyy Karabakh and Russian
    investments in Abkhazia for the Georgians.

    [Gogichaishvili, speaking at the briefing] When President Saakashvili
    spoke at the United Nations, making his statement on some Russian
    group that had been found [investing in Abkhazia], he, at the same
    time, had sent his uncle to Russia, where this money was raised.
    Generalov himself is involved in transportation business, but he has
    a partner - Proganenkin [name as heard] - who is presumably involved
    in these affairs and is Mr Temur Alasania's partner too.

    Azerbaijan claims that this territory belongs to it and regards it as
    occupied territory. In the meantime, a Georgian group invests money,
    which effectively means encouraging separatism in the region. The
    latest events and reports, saying Georgia's negotiations with the
    Azerbaijani government on energy resources have been thwarted on a
    lot of occasions, were precisely due to the group's having
    shamelessly invested its capital on the territory that Azerbaijan
    regards as its own. This effectively means encouraging separatism,
    double standards, and the exposure of the involvement of the
    president's family in corrupt deals with Russians.

    [Correspondent] These statements have already found response in the
    Georgian parliament. Majority members said that members of the
    Freedom Institute will simply have to prove and substantiate these
    accusations. As regards unproved and unspecified statements, majority
    members referred to [former Georgian Defence Minister] Irakli
    Okruashvili's example.

    [MP Vakhtang Balavadze] Where do they have this information from?
    They should have concrete facts or arguments. Otherwise, any person
    can say anything about any other person. We have already become
    accustomed to this. The opposition does not shun such things. I would
    like to remind them that Okruashvili too said things but later he
    admitted that this was not so.

    [Correspondent] One more detail from John Helmer's article: A
    criminal suit was brought in Armenia against the former owner of the
    company that is now owned by Russians and Georgians. However, we
    learn from the article that the criminal suit has been suspended now.
    The author believes that the Russia factor has played a major role
    here.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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