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Comments made by Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Gharibashvili have caused controversy in the run-up to local elections. (file photo)
Comments made by Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Gharibashvili have caused controversy in the run-up to local elections. (file photo)
Georgia holds its third national election in less than three years on June 15. Following the parliamentary ballot of October 2012 in which then-President Mikheil Saakashvili's United National Movement (ENM) was defeated after 10 years in power by the Georgian Dream (GD) coalition headed by billionaire philanthropist Bidzina Ivanishvili, and the election one year later as Saakashvili's successor of Georgian Dream candidate and former Education Minister Giorgi Margvelashvili, on this occasion voters are called on to elect new municipal councils and the mayors of the country's 12 largest cities and towns.

The two previous ballots were characterized by what commentator Gela Vasadze describes as "Shakespearean passions," but were nonetheless unequivocally rated by the international community as free, fair, and democratic.

This time, however, the campaign has been marred by allegations of government pressure on opposition candidates in some districts to withdraw, and clashes between rival political forces. Those alleged violations resulted in expressions of concern from human rights watchdogs, the U.S. Embassy in Tbilisi, the National Democratic Institute (NDI), and Central Election Commission chair Tamara Zhvania.

What is more, Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Gharibashvili has incurred harsh criticism from opposition politicians who construed a statement he made at a campaign rally in western Georgia as a call for rigging the outcome of the ballot in favour of Georgian Dream.

According to the NDI's interim report on the election campaign, some 400 candidates (of the 15,900+ who registered) have since withdrawn, more than 30 of them because of pressure from local police and other officials. Most of those instances of alleged pressure took place in areas of southern Georgia where the population is predominantly Armenian or Azerbaijani.

The Georgian Interior Ministry has denied any such pressure was exerted. The Prosecutor General's office investigated 80 such complaints, and stated that, in 76 of them, the candidates denied they were subjected to pressure. Criminal cases have been opened in the remaining four.

Violent Incidents

There have also been repeated violent incidents involving rival supporters of GD and the ENM, again mostly in the south (in Rustavi on May 24 and Gardabani on May 26). On some occasions, eggs were thrown, a practice that Justice Minister Tea Tsulukiani, who chairs an interagency body tasked with ensuring the fairness of the ballot, condemned as "not characteristic of a civilized society."

Injudicious statements by Prime Minister Gharibashvili have reinforced the perception among opposition parties that Georgian Dream is now resorting, or will resort, to the kind of election malpractice that the ENM had engaged in during its decade in power. Speaking in western Georgia in late May, Gharibashvili declared that "in the local elections as in the parliamentary and presidential elections, Georgian Dream will win worthily and convincingly and will not permit the victory of any other political force in a single region or town." Gharibashvili subsequently sought to justify and rationalize that statement, explaining that he was speaking not in his capacity as premier but as a leading member of Georgian Dream.

The NDI report nonetheless commented that such statements by the prime minister "could have the effect of challenging the impartiality that election and other government authorities have worked hard to establish. They also present the risk of being misconstrued by electoral authorities as a directive to ensure the victory of the ruling party."

This week, former Samegrelo-Zemo Svaneti governor Tenigiz Gunava, who is the ENM's candidate for the post of Zugdidi mayor, brought a libel suit against Gharibashvili for allegedly implicating him in the murder five years ago of Defense Ministry official Paata Kurdava.

On the plus side, the NDI report gives a positive assessment of recent amendments made to Georgia's election legislation. Among other things, they increase the number of seats on local councils allocated under the party list system and lower the threshold for representation from 5 to 4 percent, a move that will help small, nonparliamentary parties secure a voice at the local level. A related provision allows parties or blocs that receive at least 3 percent of the vote to claim reimbursement of up to 500,000 laris ($282,752) spent on campaign expenses.

In addition, the changes raise to 50 percent the minimum vote a mayoral candidate needs for a first round victory. The then ruling ENM lowered that threshold to 30 percent in run-up to the previous local elections in 2010 to facilitate the victory of its candidate for the mayor of Tbilisi.

Out of a total of 34 parties and blocs that applied to participate in the ballot, 20 parties and four blocs (including the ENM, Georgian Dream, and the Nonparliamentary Opposition comprising the New Rightists and Free Georgia) were formally registered. Two parties, former parliament speaker Nino Burdjanadze's Democractic Movement-- One Georgia and Jondi Baghaturia's Kartuli Dasi (Georgian Group) subsequently withdrew their lists of candidates for local councils, but Burdjanadze's party is still fielding mayoral candidates in 10 cities jointly with the Christian Democratic Movement.

Possible EU Setback

Local elections almost invariably attract a lower voter turnout than do parliamentary or presidential ballots, and several Georgian commentators believe that these elections will not prove an exception. Whether they will corroborate Gharibashvili's assertion that the ENM is "disappearing off the radar screen" remains to be seen. A poll conducted on behalf of the NDI in mid-April found support for Georgian Dream at 48 percent, with the ENM a distant second at 15 percent; Burdjanadze's bloc and the Labor Party both rated 4 percent.

In Tbilisi, Georgian Dream's candidate David Narmania enjoyed 39 percent support followed by Nika Melia (ENM, 10 percent) and Dmitry Lortkipanidze (Burdjanadze's bloc, 9 percent), suggesting that contest may go to a second round runoff.

While the conduct of the vote is unlikely to derail the signing, scheduled for June 27, of Georgia's Association Agreement with the European Union, blatant recourse to administrative leverage to secure the landslide win that Gharibashvili predicted for Georgian Dream or violence on polling day could demolish Georgia's already dwindling hopes of being offered a MAP (Membership Action Plan) at the NATO summit in Wales in September.

-- Liz Fuller

The Moscow City Court has sentenced to jail terms ranging from 12 years to life five Chechen men whom a jury found guilty last month of the murder in October 2006 of investigative journalist Anna Politkovskaya. All five pleaded not guilty.

In the late 1990s and early 2000s, Politkovskaya won widespread respect and renown for her coverage of the fighting in Chechnya, the misery and human rights violations that ensued, and corruption and brutality among the pro-Moscow leadership Russian President Vladimir Putin installed to succeed democratically elected Chechen President Aslan Maskhadov. Politkovskaya’s colleague Dmitry Muratov estimates that she wrote more than 500 such articles for the independent newspaper "Novaya gazeta" of which he is editor.

The five men sentenced for killing her are: Lom-Ali Gaytukayev, a crime boss currently serving a prison term for another contract killing, who is accused of masterminding the murder at the behest of unnamed individuals angered by Politkovskaya’s revelations of corruption and human rights violations; his nephews Ibragim and Dzhabrail Makhmudov, accused of driving the getaway car; their elder brother Rustam Makhmudov, identified as the killer who shot Politkovskaya five times in the elevator of her apartment building in Moscow; and former Moscow policeman Sergei Khadzhikurbanov, who is said to have organized surveillance of Politkovskaya’s movements prior to her death.

Rustam Makhmudov and Gaytukayev were jailed for life; Khadzhikurbanov for 20 years; and Dzhabrail and Ibragim Makhmudov for 14 and 12 years respectively.

The judge overruled the argument by their defense lawyers that the guilty verdict was illegal because just 30 minutes before the jury withdrew, he had replaced one of its members who had urged her fellow jurors to step down.

The court likewise rejected the defense’s objections that the prosecution failed to provide any evidence of the men’s guilt or determine what motive they had for the murder.

In the wake of the murder, numerous hypotheses were expounded about why and by whom Politkovskaya had been killed. The eight most plausible, as enumerated by the website Caucasus Knot, are as follows:

  • The Chechen Republic leadership, including then-Prime Minister Ramzan Kadyrov, commissioned and organized the murder. Interviewed by Politkovskaya in June 2004, Kadyrov branded her "an enemy" and "a liar." Her description of his general demeanour and how he treated subordinates is less than flattering. When Politkovskaya asked Kadyrov what branch of law he was writing his dissertation on, he replied: "I've forgotten. But I’ve got it written down somewhere."
  • The Russian authorities were behind the murder.
  • Politkovskaya was killed to discredit Putin and Kadyrov. Putin’s birthday is October 6, the day of the murder, Kadyrov’s is one day earlier.
  • Politkovskaya’s death was advantageous to the West (why is not clear, unless because it reflected badly on Putin).
  • The murder was commissioned by exiled oligarch Boris Berezovsky. Berezovsky denied any connection, but the Russian authorities have apparently not totally ruled out that possibility. According to Investigative Committee spokesman Vladimir Markin, Russia is still waiting for responses from the United Kingdom and Turkey to requests for legal assistance in connection with Politkovskaya’s death. Berezovsky lived in Britain from 2000 until his death in March 2013.
  • Politkovskaya was killed by former Interior Ministry officers from the Khanty-Mansy Autonomous Okrug in revenge for articles that led to the conviction of one of their colleagues for murder.
  • The murder was undertaken by a person or people devoted to someone whose misdeeds Politkovskaya chronicled.
  • Politkovskaya was killed by extreme nationalists who considered her “an enemy of the Russian people.”


In the summer of 2007, Russian Prosecutor-General Yury Chaika announced that the murder had been solved and that it had been committed by members of a prominent criminal grouping. Eleven suspects were arrested, including former Chechen local official Shamil Burayev, but he and seven others were subsequently released.

The remaining three -- Khadzhikurbanov and Dzhabrail and Ibragim Makhmudov -- went on trial in October 2008, but in February 2009 a jury found them not guilty.

The Russian Prosecutor-General's Office appealed the acquittal, however, and a new investigation was launched, which led to the arrest two years later, in March 2011, of the Makhmudovs’ elder brother Rustam.

The turning point came in August 2011 with the arrest of a second former police officer, retired Lieutenant Colonel Dmitry Pavlyuchenkov, who had been a witness for the prosecution during the first trial. Pavlyuchenkov admitted to his role in the murder, for which he was tried in a separate case and jailed for 11 years.

According to the defense lawyers, the prosecution’s case in the second trial was based largely on Pavlyuchenkov’s testimony.

Specifically, Pavlyuchenkov said that he organized surveillance by former colleagues under Khadzhikurbanov’s guidance of Politkovskaya’s movements and passed the details to Gaytukayev, who had paid him $150,000 for his services. Khadzhikurbanov denies this, claiming Pavlyuchenkov incriminated him out of personal spite.
Pavlyuchenkov also said he provided Rustam Makhmudov with the murder weapon.

The defense has consistently highlighted the absence of material evidence to support the prosecution’s case. They argued that the man seen on video surveillance footage entering Politkovskaya’s apartment building before the murder and the man who left afterwards, whom Pavlyuchenkov identified with 80 percent certainty as Rustam Makhmudov even though the defense insists he bore no resemblance to Makhmudov, are two different people (one was wearing a black jacket and the other a white jacket). They further pointed out that given the time lag between when Politkovskaya entered the building loaded down with grocery shopping and the man identified as the killer emerged, the latter would have had just 24 seconds in which to run down half a flight of stairs, fire five shots through the slowly closing elevator door, change his jacket, and exit the building.

What is more, the defense stressed the failure of the prosecution to account for the absence of Rustam Makhmudov's fingerprints either in the vehicle identified as the getaway car or on the murder weapon, and the presence on that gun and elsewhere at the scene of the crime of an unidentified woman’s DNA.

In March, presiding judge Pavel Melekhin refused to allow the use of a lie-detector while the accused were being questioned.

Rustam Makhmudov denies he or his brothers had anything to do with killing, and says he met Khadzhikurbanov, to whom his uncle had introduced him, twice at most. Defense lawyer Murad Musayev has said he was convinced that it was Pavlyuchenkov who masterminded the murder.

In a press release after the jury found the five accused guilty, Amnesty International said that verdict “marks only a small step towards justice. The process has left too many questions unanswered and full justice will not be served until those who ordered the crime are identified and face the courts.”

-- Liz Fuller

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About This Blog

This blog presents analyst Liz Fuller's personal take on events in the region, following on from her work in the "RFE/RL Caucasus Report." It also aims, to borrow a metaphor from Tom de Waal, to act as a smoke detector, focusing attention on potential conflict situations and crises throughout the region. The views are the author's own and do not represent those of RFE/RL.

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