“Abashidze has fled, Adjara is free,” President Saakashvili said and congratulated Georgians, as he described, “with a second bloodless revolution” in Georgia.
The protesters in Batumi, accompanied by Georgian Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania and other members of the cabinet, moved towards the Abashidze’s residence, which was abandoned by ex-Adjarian leader’s security forces after his resignation.
Earlier on May 5 President Saakashvili said, “the hours of Abashidze’s regime are numbered” and offered a safe passage to the Adjarian leader. Saakashvili, who spoke twice with his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin on May 5, asked Russia to grant Aslan Abashidze political asylum. Direct presidential rule will be imposed on Adjarian Autonomy, according to Mikheil Saakashvili. “A special council will rule the region, before the snap local elections are held in Adjara,” he added. Mikheil Saakashvili also said that Georgia should be “proud, because we have managed to carry out two bloodless revolutions during several months.” Last November peaceful demonstrations in Tbilisi forced ex-President Shevardnadze to step down. Russian security chief Igor Ivanov was dispatched to Batumi on May 5 after the phone talks between Saakashvili and Putin. Arrival of Igor Ivanov, the Secretary of Russian National Security Council is a good sign for the Georgia’s central authorities. Last November, Ivanov, who served as Russia’s Foreign Minister then, arrived in Georgia and mediated between former opposition leader Mikheil Saakashvili and Georgian ex-President Eduard Shevardnadze that led to latter’s resignation. |
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