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  • Bush grenade scare: Man confesses

    CNN
    July 21 2005

    Bush grenade scare: Man confesses

    Thursday, July 21, 2005; Posted: 7:05 a.m. EDT (11:05 GMT)


    Vladimer Arutiniani confessed to throwing the grenade, according to
    Georgian officials.

    TBILISI, Georgia (CNN) -- A man has confessed to throwing a live
    grenade near where U.S. President George W. Bush was speaking during
    the American leader's visit to Georgia in May, a government official
    says.

    Vladimer Arutiniani, 27, was wounded then detained in former Soviet
    nation Georgia on Wednesday, following gunfire in which a policeman
    was killed, Interior Minister Ivane Merabishvili told reporters.

    Arutiniani made the confession to doctors from his hospital bed,
    he said.

    Merabishvili said police went to the man's apartment on Wednesday
    after receiving a tip that he might have information regarding the
    throwing of the grenade. The gunfight began when the man opened fire,
    he said. (Full story)

    Georgian officials have said that the grenade was made in Armenia.
    The suspect is a citizen of Georgia and an ethnic Armenian, according
    to government officials.

    Georgia, in the Caucasus Mountain region, is bordered by Armenia,
    Russia, Azerbaijan, Turkey and the Black Sea.

    No-one was hurt in the incident, which happened in Tbilisi's Freedom
    Square in May. Tbilisi is Georgia's capital.

    Although the grenade did not explode, it could have, according to
    Georgian officials and an FBI agent. (Full story)

    Asked about Wednesday's developments, Secret Service spokesman Tom
    Mazur said, "We were not involved" in the incident but "we continue
    to monitor the Georgian investigation."

    In the hours after the incident, a spokesman for the Interior Ministry
    had described the device as an inert, Soviet-era training grenade
    that posed no threat to President Bush or his audience.

    The grenade was tossed within 100 feet (30 meters) of the podium where
    Bush, Georgia President Mikhail Saakashvili and other officials were
    protected by bulletproof glass.

    Tens of thousands of people had crowded into Tbilisi's main plaza to
    hear President Bush speak on May 10.

    A statement on the U.S. Embassy Web site called the grenade a "live
    device that simply failed to function." There was no disturbance in
    the crowd.

    The grenade was wrapped in a "dark tartan-colored cloth," the
    statement said.

    "We consider this act to be a threat against the health and welfare of
    both the president of the United States and the president of Georgia
    as well as the multitude of Georgian people that had turned out at
    the event," the statement added.

    A reward of 20,000 laris ($10,978) was offered in exchange for
    information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person
    responsible, the embassy statement said.

    CNN's Nastya Anashkina and Helen Gotsadze for CNN contributed to
    this report.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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