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Georgian prison abuse shockwave felt in Brussels

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Published 20 September 2012, updated 21 September 2012

Angry protestors marched in the streets of the Georgian capital Tbilisi after TV showed footage of inmates being tortured and sexually assaulted in the country’s prisons. Tensions were felt as far as Brussels where anti- and pro-government lobbying soared ahead of the bitterly contested parliamentary election scheduled for 1 October.

The footage, which was aired on an opposition television channel, shows graphic physical and sexual violence by prison guards. Euronews released a small part of the footage, avoiding the most cruel scenes.

Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvali vowed to punish those responsible and bring in additional police  to staff the country's prisons.

Saakashvili’s government maintained that the guards in the videos were paid to stage abuse for political reasons.

“Those who were responsible for the penitentiary system and failed to prevent such atrocities from happening will be fired. And those who committed the crimes, I promise you, will spend long years in jail,” the president said.

Majority and opposition clash in Brussels

In Brussels, the Georgian ambassador to the EU, Salome Samadashvili, said yesterday (19 September) that the country’s embassy had received threats and blamed opposition representatives living in Belgium for fuelling the tensions.

She made the statement during a public event organised by the European Policy Centre, a Brussels think tank, included a representative of the pro-Saakashvili camp, and a leading opposition activist.

Tedo Japaridze, representing the Georgia Dream opposition coalition, said the relatives and friends of those jailed, as well as ordinary Georgians, could not be blamed for speaking out against the abuse. Georgia has one of the world's highest rates of incarceration, according to the International Centre for Prison Studies in London.

Giorgi Kandelaki, deputy chair of the Georgian Parliament’s Foreign relations Committee, representing the ruling United National Movement (UNM) coalition, admitted the numbers of inmates in his country is high, but said it was the result of the government's “extraordinary fight against organised crime” and that the country was now one of the safest places in the world.

Kandelaki slammed the opposition with a long list of grievances. Chief among those were accusations that the Georgian Dream coalition, led by billionaire Bidzina Ivanishvili, had stated that it would not recognise the election results if it didn’t win. Another is that Georgian Dream has been using campaign funds that were “double the size of the Georgian budget”.

Japaridze said he was not going to reply to the attacks with counter-accusations. He said he had gone to Brussels to deliver the message that his political force was not pro-Russian, contrary to claims by Saakashvili’s camp.

“We are committed to Euro-Atlantic integration, in a  realistic way,” he said, adding that in comparison to UNM, Georgian Dream would not play “stupid geopolitical games” and as a result, Georgia would “stop being an irritant” in international affairs.

Regarding Georgia’s political system under Saakashvili, he called it “demokratura” – the rule of a nomenklatura “close to one man” which in his words makes decisions on behalf of Georgia.

Saakshvili, president since 2004, has managed to stay in power despite provoking a five-day war with Russia in August 2008, following which Tbilisi lost control of South Ossetia and Abkhazia (see background).

His term of office expires in the autumn of 2013. According to the constitution, he cannot be elected for a third term.

‘Most important’ vote since ‘Rose Revolution’

The representatives of two NGOs at the debate see this year's vote as the important election since the 2003 “Rose Revolution”.

Jacqueline Hale from the Open Society institute said that accusation from both camps, that “Misha” [Saakashvili] was an autocrat and that Ivanishvili was a "Russian stooge”, were “not good”. She said there was no evidence to substantiate geopolitical accusations, and spoke in critical terms against the “rhetoric of PR agencies from both sides”.

Dennis Sammut, director of the London Information Network on Conflicts and State-Building, said the most important outcome from the 1 October election would be the end of the “one-party rule” in place since 2003. “Checks and balances have been missing” in Georgia during this period, he said.

Provided the two opposite camps stick to the rules of parliamentary democracy, Sammut said that it didn’t matter if "a Saakashvili or an Ivanishvili" were to win.

“I don’t care. Any “Shvili” will do, he said amid laughs.

Positions: 

Tornike Gordadze, newly appointed state minister of Georgia for Euro-Atlantic integration, told journalists in Brussels on 18 September that the government had made unprecedented efforts to allow the elections to be transparent, including by inviting 70 long-term and 500 short-term international observers.

A new electoral law has been adopted and the electoral lists were now more accurate, he said.

Some 69% of the Georgians believed that the elections would be free and fair, he said, adding that according to opinion polls, a very high turnout of 77% was expected.

But Gordadze blamed the opposition for resorting to “hate speech”, for attacking the country’s institutions and for breaching the rules for campaign funding.

He also said Prime Minister Vano Merabishvili was more popular than Saakashvili, adding that since the prime minister presented himself as a candidate, the level of support for UNM had increased.

“But he’s not Medvedev,” he added, alluding to Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, who has twice swapped positions with Vladimir Putin to suit constitutional requirements.

He also indicated that the UNM didn’t convey the message that “Misha” Saakashvili would become prime minister if his political force wins.

A spokesperson of Catherine Ashton, High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy and Vice President of the Commission, issued the following statement: "The High Representative is appalled by the shocking footage of abuses committed against inmates in Gldani prison. She recalls that all countries are obliged to comply with the unconditional prohibition of any form of torture and ill-treatment. She notes that the Government has taken the initial steps to address this matter and stresses that it is of vital importance that these and other incidents are thoroughly and transparently investigated and that those responsible are held to account."

Next steps: 
  • 1 Oct.: Parliamentary elections
  • October 2013: Presidential elections
Georgi Gotev

COMMENTS

  • Unfortunately a modern civilization takes a long time to evolve. But, if nations are not civilised in accordance with the normally acceptable standards of humanity, they should not be allowed to any EU table. Indeed unacceptable human travesties such as these are usually not isolated cases and are ripe throughout a state. Therefore there will be a great deal more going on that the EU and the outside world knows nothing about when it comes to basic human rights. That analysis is based upon pure logic and sheer historical factors. Therefore Georgia will have to change a great deal in its appreciation of what human rights mean and what is acceptable to a civilised world that has ultimately humanity at its heart.

    Dr David Hill
    World Innovation Foundation
    United Kingdom - Switzerland

    By :
    Dr David Hill - World Innovation Foundation
    - Posted on :
    20/09/2012
  • Prisons using various forms of sexual torture on males. Well what gave the Georgian Napoleon the idea of using sexual torture on his opponents? Oh yes a US President.
    And those Western toss pots who blabber intermittently about human rights are ignored completely when the torture,rape and murder serve Western interests. As long as the drone strikes are ordered by good old Obama(who won a Nobel peace prize,you can't make this stuff up) no European government will do or say anything. And as everyone knows(WIF accepted) a European citizen kidnapped by the CIA could be tortured to death a dozen times before their government would even ask their US masters what had occurred.

    By :
    Babeouf
    - Posted on :
    20/09/2012
  • I agree entirely Babeouf. But it does not let Georgia off the hook. I am also fully aware that government's bow to the economic power of the Global 2000 that controlled 51% of the global turnover last year and that is why in many ways they do their master's bidding. Indeed if it was not for economic reasons there would be no wars but where somehow civilization has to have humanity or we might as well fully classify ourselves as animals, dogs and sub-humans. The majority luckily have humanity at their hearts but where there is a growing percentage of power-brokers who have no empathy with society and will do anything to acquire power and vast wealth that comes with that. Those are the ones who create wars on the back of economic wealth – predominantly for themselves.

    A sad old world and one that will implode with the present way that we do business around the world and where political leaders are just pawns in this big old game of greed and the acquisition of wealth at all cost. Fairly recent authorative reports by MIT (voted the top uni. in the world two weeks ago) and the Royal Society both say that the 2030s will be when the ‘big’ implosion will happen to humankind and thereafter go down hill fast.

    Dr David Hill
    World Innovation Foundation
    United Kingdom - Switzerland

    By :
    Dr David Hill - World Innovation Foundation
    - Posted on :
    20/09/2012
Protests in Tbilisi
Background: 

Russia and Georgia fought a five-day war in August 2008. The conflict saw Russian troops repel an assault on the breakaway pro-Russian region of South Ossetia, which broke free from Tbilisi's rule in the early 1990s.

Russia later recognised South Ossetia and Georgia's second breakaway region of Abkhazia as independent states. Russia has thousands of troops stationed in both regions. 

Vladimir Putin, then the prime minister of Russia, was quoted at the time by a French diplomat as saying that he wanted Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili hanged. 

Privately, EU representatives generally recognise that Saakashvili was to blame for the August war. However, he still enjoys Western support as a symbol of the 2003 Rose Revolution.

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