IN
THE NEWS - Georgia Politics
Cynthia Kirk
This is Steve Ember with IN THE NEWS from VOA Special
English.
Mikhail Saakashvili has announced plans to be a candidate
for President in Georgia. Mister Saakashvili helped organize street
protests that led to President Eduard Shevardnadze to resign from office
last Sunday.
Mister Saakashvili is an American-trained lawyer.
He served two years as Georgia's Justice Minister. Last year, he cut
his ties with Mister Shevardnadze over the issue of dishonesty by Georgian
officials. Mister Saakashvili formed an opposition party, the National
Movement. He also was elected to a top local government job in the capital,
Tbilisi. On Wednesday, the National Movement and its allies named him
as their only candidate in a special presidential election to be held
in January.
Mister Shevardnadze left office after three weeks
of demonstrations against parliamentary elections held earlier this
month. Opposition leaders said the elections were unfairly designed
to keep pro-government parties in power.
Last Saturday, thousands of protesters forced their
way into Georgia's parliament building. They forced Mister Shevardnadze
and newly-appointed lawmakers to flee. The next day, the President resigned,
ending his eleven-years in office.
Mister Shaakashvili had help from two other opponents
of Mister Shevardnadze. The speaker of parliament, Nino Burdzhanadze,
is now Georgia's acting(代理)president.
The other leader, Zurab Zhvania, has been named state minister, the
second highest position in the government.
Georgian lawmakers have yet to agree on a date for
new parliamentary elections. On Tuesday, the nation's Supreme Court
canceled the results of the parliamentary elections this month.
Mizz Burdzhanadze has said one of her main goals will
be to keep peace in Georgia. She says another goal will be to strengthen
the economy and prepare for new elections. However, she warned that
the country is close to economic failure. She said she would appeal
for financial aid.
Georgia is one of the poorest of any of the fifteen
former republics of the Soviet Union. The country is home to about five-million
people. Some reports estimate that about half of its population is unemployed.
Many blame President Shevardnadze for leading the
country into financial ruin. Georgia has a foreign debt of almost two-thousand-million
dollars, most of it owed to Turkey and Russia. It also receives financial
assistance from the United States.
But opposition leaders say Mister Shevardnadze failed
to use much of that money the right way. The International Monetary
Fund refused to give loans to Georgia during Mister Shevardnadze's rule.
It notes dishonesty by public officials and the country's failure to
collect taxes. The temporary government cannot pay wages or retirement
benefits until after the presidential election next year.
Delegations from the I-M-F, the World Bank and the
United States are expected to visit Tbilisi next week to discuss the
country's appeal for financial aid.
IN THE NEWS, from VOA Special English, was written
by Cynthia Kirk. This is Steve Ember.
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