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  • Doubling Saakashvili

    DOUBLING SAAKASHVILI
    by Alexander Iashvili, Maxim Yusin, Victor Zozulya

    What the Papers Say
    January 10, 2008 Thursday
    Russia

    HIGHLIGHT: HOW MANY VOTES DID MIKHAIL SAAKASHVILI REALLY POLL?;
    An update on the presidential election in Georgia on January 5.

    The Georgian Central Electoral Commission is practically through with
    bulletin-counting. Judging by official reports, there will be no second
    round because Mikhail Saakashvili polled over 52% votes and thus won
    handsomely in the first. The problem is, not everybody in Georgia
    trusts official reports. Opposition leaders are stone-cold confident
    that the authorities rigged the election and threaten the regime with
    mass protests. Is Georgia heading for another Revolution of Roses?

    The capital of Georgia is bracing itself for lengthy protest actions.

    United opposition leader Levan Gachechiladze claims that Mikhail
    Saakashvili has stolen his triumph and promises to keep up protests.

    He says the authorities must revise the outcome of the election and
    permit another round.

    Humanitarian as he is, Gachechiladze nevertheless suspended protest
    actions to give courts time to rule on the lawsuits filed by the
    opposition and void the outcome of the election in the constituencies
    where observers of the opposition had logged particularly crying
    violations. Once that is done, the opposition will begin preparations
    for the second round of the election. Should courts prove intractable,
    however, the opposition will foment another revolution.

    Practically all Georgians are convinced that the election was rigged.

    Is there anybody the regime may count on? There surely must be someone.

    First, the military. Revolution of the Roses in Georgia made the
    military the elite - with high salaries and numerous privileges
    and benefits.

    Second, the police and secret services. Saakashvili learned from
    the mistakes of his predecessor Eduard Shevardnadze, the previous
    president of Georgia who had found himself without support in security
    structures when it really mattered. Police officers in Georgia are
    pampered and humored by the state. Upper echelons of secret services
    see themselves as masters of all, they milk private businesses, set
    up commercial structures of their own (registered in their relatives'
    names)... All of Georgia - all of the world - saw the determination
    with which security structures were prepared to defend Saakashvili
    on November 7 when a protest rally was brutally dispersed in Tbilisi.

    Needless to say, the authorities deny all innuendo and hail the
    recent election as democratic. They never miss a chance to quote OSCE
    observers that called the election "free and fair". All TV networks
    had a field day with the congratulations Saakashvili received from
    his Ukrainian "comrade in arms" Yulia Timoshenko.

    As a matter of fact, the Georgian leader proclaimed himself the winner
    (and therefore president) without waiting for foreign observers'
    conclusions or even interim data from polling stations.

    Results of exit-polls published two hours after completion of the
    voting sufficed. It was on this basis alone that the leader of the
    past revolution told his triumphant followers to have no fears because
    he had been elected the president in the very first round.

    "Saakashvili charted a clean-cut scheme and followed it faithfully,
    step by step," to quote Gija Tortladze, one of the leaders of the
    united opposition (mountain-climber in happier days). "For starters,
    he had Imedi TV network closed down. No wonder, because all other TV
    networks support him completely. Take a look at how the whole campaign
    was covered. Saakashvili's 30-minute speech was broadcast in full live
    and repeated again and again, ad nauseam. Speeches of candidates from
    the opposition did not last longer than 20 or 30 seconds. What kind
    of equality are we talking about?"

    "A few words on these so called exit-polls now," Tortladze continued,
    clearly warming up to the subject. "Contracted by four loyal TV
    networks, sociologists from Saakashvili's own team conducted these
    polls. Scratch my back and I'll scratch yours - that sort of thing.

    It goes without saying that the outcome was a foregone conclusion,
    right? Why would the authorities schedule festivities for 8 p.m.

    otherwise? They were not supposed to know the outcome of the election,
    were they? Fact is, they knew everything in advance. The country
    was informed of Saakashvili's alleged triumph in the first round. It
    was the first step in the campaign of nationwide brainwashing. All
    the rest presented no problems. Count the bulletins "correctly",
    come up with the missing bulletins, and so on..."

    Labor Party ideologist Kaja Dzaganija said, "Judging by the bulletins,
    there has been a colossal baby-boom in Georgia since the previous
    election. There were 2.2 million voters in Georgia then and 3.4 million
    now. It's fantastic! India and China, eat your hearts out! Call
    Guinness! The explanation is simple. The authorities registered as
    voters more than a million of whoever left Georgia for good..."

    P.S. Dictatorship in Georgia

    "For want of a better term, I'd call what is happening in Georgia
    nowadays "antidemocratic aggression," Gachechiladze said. "Georgia
    may be heading for dictatorship, you know... We won't give in. We
    won't abandon our native country. Without fearing to sound banal,
    I'll say that I fear nothing at all - not even death. Georgians are
    not to be intimidated. If you ask me, even the West is thoroughly
    fed up with Saakashvili. As for Russia, I'm convinced that relations
    with this country should be based on mutual tact. It is mutual tact
    that has been lacking in the relations lately.

    P.P.S. Buying votes

    An interview with political scientist Maxim Grigoriev who observed
    the election in Georgia

    Question: How did your organization monitor the election?

    Maxim Grigoriev: It was not easy. The Georgian authorities announced
    that no Russian non-governmental organizations would be accredited as
    observers. We managed it all the same. First, Georgian youths used
    a grant from us to organize a web site where all known violation of
    the procedure in the course of the election were reported. Second,
    we invited into our program some representatives of Ukrainian
    non-governmental organization who had the necessary accreditation.

    Question: And what is your opinion of the election?

    Maxim Grigoriev: It was not up to Russian, Ukrainian, or
    international standards. What we observed could be only appraised
    as mass falsifications. I'm convinced that Saakashvili ended up with
    considerably less than 50% - and that despite the atmosphere of fear
    cultivated in Georgia and despite tame and servile media. Saakashvili
    would certainly have been defeated in the second round.

    Question: What violations exactly were logged?

    Maxim Grigoriev: Saakashvili and his team were bribing voters -
    there are no two ways about it. Nearly 1.5 million citizens of
    Georgia received the so called presidential vouchers. Their holders
    are entitled to a recompense for gas and electric power tariffs, to
    free pharmaceuticals and firewood. It is possible to cash the voucher
    and the sum amounts to two monthly salaries. In short, almost every
    second voter in Georgia got this "gift" from the president.

    The authorities claim that it all was part of the official presidential
    program allegedly launched on October 4. That's a lie, of course. We
    know for a fact that it was only on January 5 that holders of these
    vouchers found it possible to cash them.

    Election in some territories, say with the predominantly Armenian
    or Azerbaijani population, was rigged. We know that a lot of votes
    allegedly cast for Saakashvili there belong to the dead or immigrants.
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