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Authorities Declare Georgian Prime Minister's Death an Accident

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  • Authorities Declare Georgian Prime Minister's Death an Accident

    AUTHORITIES DECLARE GEORGIAN PRIME MINISTER'S DEATH AN ACCIDENT

    EURASIA INSIGHT

    EurasiaNet.org
    Thursday, February 3, 2005

    By Molly Corso

    Zurab Zhvania, Georgia's prime minister and a member of the triumvirate
    that led the country's 2003 Rose Revolution, was found dead in a Tbilisi
    apartment February 3, the apparent victim of carbon-monoxide poisoning.
    An initial investigation indicated that Zhvania's death was accidental.
    The tragedy comes at a particularly sensitive time for the Georgian
    government, and deprives the country of its most experienced reformist
    politician.

    Zhvania's death occurred at the apartment of Raul Usupov, the deputy
    governor of the Kvemo-Kartli region, who also died in the incident. The
    prime minister's bodyguards discovered the bodies of the two men at
    about 4:30 am, breaking down the apartment's door after not receiving a
    response to knocking and a cell-phone call, according to reports. The
    two had apparently succumbed to carbon-monoxide fumes.

    The motivation for Zhvania's late-night visit to Usupov's apartment
    remains shrouded in mystery. A source told EurasiaNet that the prime
    minister reportedly received a phone call around midnight, as he was
    preparing to go to bed, prompting him to change his plans and depart for
    Usupov's apartment. Inside the apartment, investigators found an open
    backgammon board. According to Vasil Maghlaperidze, a member of
    parliament, Usupov had been seeking a meeting with the prime minister
    for the past week.

    Vano Merabishvili, the minister of internal affairs, announced that a
    preliminary investigation ruled out criminal action in connections with
    the deaths. Authorities fixed the cause on a faulty heating system,
    which had recently been installed in Usupov's apartment.

    Nugzar Mkhedze, a representative of Tbilgazi, said the
    Iranian-manufactured heater had not been properly installed causing
    fumes to accumulate inside the poorly ventilated apartment. "The heater
    consumes oxygen from the room. When there is no more oxygen, it poisons
    the air," he explained. "In the back, there was not a good connection.
    Fifteen to 20 minutes is enough to start poisoning a person."

    Mkhedze added that Zhvania and Usupov could well have been unaware of
    the poisoning danger, given that carbon monoxide is difficult to detect.
    "You just want to sleep. You fall asleep and die," Mkhedze said in a
    statement issued after examining Usupov's apartment.

    Late on February 3, Deputy Justice Minister Levan Samkharauli announced
    that forensic tests revealed that Zhvania's body contained double the
    lethal amount of carboxihemoglobin - a product of carbon-monoxide
    inhalation -- in his bloodstream. The build-up of carboxihemoglobin in
    Zhvania's and Usupov's bodies cut the oxygen supply to their brains and
    other organs, causing them to asphyxiate, Samkharauli indicated.

    Zhvania's death shocked Georgia's political establishment. A visibly
    shaken President Mikheil Saakashvili, speaking on Georgian television,
    said Zhvania's untimely death posed a significant challenge to the
    government's stabilization efforts. "This is a blow for our country and
    for me personally," Saakashvili said. "I call on everybody to be strong,
    to stand together and continue to serve our country."

    Manana Nachepia, a representative of the New Right/Industrialists
    opposition coalition, lamented Zhvania's passing, saying the country has
    lost a patriot. "Even though we were opposition, we considered him very
    smart, very energetic and he fought for [Georgia]," she said in a
    telephone interview. "I can't say any thing concrete about what will be
    next, but I hope everything falls unto place and goes well."

    The news of Zhvania's death came on the heels of a February 1
    car-bombing in the city of Gori. Saakashvili characterized the bombing
    as a terrorist act, and it has heightened the tension surrounding the
    Georgian government's efforts to reintegrate the break-away regions of
    Abkhazia and South Ossetia. The tragedy could also significantly impact
    the country's privatization process, one of Zhvania's primary
    responsibilities.

    Saakashvili announced that, for the time being, he would assume
    Zhvania's duties, the Civil Georgia web site reported late on February
    3. Earlier reports had indicated that Saakashvili had elevated Vice
    Premier Giorgi Baramidze to serve as the provisional head of government.

    Saakashvili reportedly convened a late-night session of the country's
    National Security Council on February 3 to discuss potential prime
    ministerial candidates. Saakashvili indicated that he would nominate a
    replacement for Zhvania within a week, a Civil Georgia report said.

    Zurab Zhvania, who was 41 at the time of his death, had been prominent
    in Georgia's reform movement for over 15 years. Political analysts in
    Tbilisi described him as the glue that held Saakashvili's cabinet
    together, serving as a bridge between economic reformers, led by
    financial trouble-shooter Kakha Bendukidze and the nationalist faction
    led by Defense Minister Irakli Okruashvili. He was one of the few
    members of the cabinet with extensive experience in positions of
    authority. Zhvania leaves behind a wife, Nino, and three children;
    Elizabeth, Bessarion and Ann.

    A biologist by training, he got his start in politics in 1989, when he
    was elected chairman of the Georgian Green Party. In 1992, Zhvania was
    elected to parliament. The next year, he catapulted to national
    prominence, becoming the secretary-general of the newly established
    Citizens Union of Georgia (CUG), which was at the time envisioned as a
    political support vehicle for then-president Eduard Shevardnadze.

    The CUG swept the parliamentary elections of 1995, and Zhvania emerged
    as the speaker of the legislature. He held that post until 2001, when he
    resigned amid a government crisis. During his tenure as parliament
    speaker, he led the so-called "Young Reformer" movement and was
    instrumental in bringing Saakashvili into Shevardnadze's administration
    as justice minister. Like Zhvania, Saakashvili resigned in late 2001,
    complaining about corruption.

    In opposition to Shevardnadze, Zhvania and Saakashvili pursued different
    political courses, with the present-day president favoring more
    confrontational tactics. Saakashvili's aggressiveness captured
    publicity, enabling him to vault past Zhvania as the most prominent
    figure in Georgia's reform movement.

    The two became close allies again during the aftermath of the November
    2003 parliamentary election, which they denounced as rigged by
    Shevardnadze's administration. The two, along with incumbent Parliament
    Speaker Nino Burjanadze, helped galvanize popular protests into what
    became known as the Rose Revolution, forcing Shevardnadze's resignation.

    In the post-Shevardnadze era, Zhvania and Saakashvili appeared to
    coexist well as the government pursued an ambitious program to
    reintegrate the country and root out corruption. In televised comments
    February 3, Saakashvili called Zhvania his "closest friend, closest
    adviser and faithful ally."

    Editor's Note: Molly Corso is a freelance journalist and photographer
    based in Tbilisi.


    http://eurasianet.org/departments/insight/articles/eav020305.shtml
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