The authorities in breakaway Abkhazia released on May 3 three Georgian students arrested two months ago. 19-year-old Iveri Korshia and Levan Gachava and Koba Rigvava, both 20-years-old, were released on Thursday afternoon and were immediately brought to Tbilisi where President Saakashvili gave them a hero’s welcome. After awarding them with medals of honor, Saakashvili joined a rally outside his office organized by university student organizations, which have close ties with the ruling National Movement party. Saakashvili told the rally that Georgia’s ill-wishers should refrain from “terrorism and criminal acts, as everyone will be held responsible." He also said that Georgia didn't need “to apologize for anything.” The circumstances surrounding the students’ release remain unclear. Earlier on the same day, Abkhaz officials had demanded that the Georgian side free David Sigua, an official in the Gali District of breakaway Abkhazia, in exchange for the release of the three students. The Georgian Interior Ministry, however, said in a statement on May 3 that the students had not been exchanged for Sigua. “The Interior Ministry has not arrested Sigua, hence no exchange could have taken place,” the statement said. Sigua has been missing since February, 2007. The Abkhaz side claims that Sigua, an ethnic Georgian, was kidnapped by Georgian law enforcers in retaliation for his cooperation with the Abkhaz authorities. |
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