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Georgia street protesters urge Saakashvili to quit
09 Apr 2009 16:34:26 GMT
Source: Reuters
* Opposition says it will protest until president resigns

* Alleges police foul play to limit turnout

* West, drawing oil via Georgia, on watch for any crackdown

(Adds details, EU envoy)

By Matt Robinson and Margarita Antidze

TBILISI, April 9 (Reuters) - At least 60,000 Georgians rallied on Thursday at the start of a campaign to demand President Mikheil Saakashvili resign, led by opponents emboldened by last year's disastrous war with Russia.

Opposition leaders have promised to demonstrate daily outside parliament in Tbilisi until Saakashvili quits, accusing him of monopolising power and stifling reforms promised in the 2003 Rose Revolution that swept him to power.

"We have no other way out but to stand here until the end, until the Judas of Georgian politics resigns," former presidential challenger Levan Gachechiladze told the crowd.

War in August, when Russia crushed a Georgian assault on the breakaway South Ossetia region and sent tanks to within 40 km (25 miles) of Tbilisi, was seized on by critics who say the leader has made too many mistakes to stay in power until 2013.

Speakers at the rally outside parliament complained of government pressure on the media and judiciary, and criticised the lost war. Protesters raised hands to endorse a statement urging Saakashvili to go. Organisers gave him 24 hours to reply.

There were reports of small protests in other towns. Opposition leaders accused police of detaining 60 activists overnight southeast of Tbilisi, and said authorities had limited public transport into the capital to keep turnout down. Police denied the allegations.

Saakashvili has polarised opinion in the former Soviet republic. But analysts say they doubt the opposition's strength of leadership, unity or support outside the capital are sufficient to force him out.

"Today is referendum day in Georgia," said former U.N. ambassador Irakly Alasania, one of several senior figures to defect from Saakashvili citing serious errors of judgment.

He urged people to return at 3 p.m. (1100 GMT) on Friday. Some pledged to camp outside parliament overnight.

Diplomats say Saakashvili's retains strong support despite the war, the defections and repeated cabinet reshuffles that have fuelled questions over his leadership style.

Many Georgians are tired of political bickering in the capital and are sympathetic to government calls for stability as a global economic crisis deepens.

OPPOSITION ALLEGES FOUL PLAY

Perceived as brash and impulsive, Saakashvili's handling of the war has come under some scrutiny among Georgians. But he draws support from the prevailing consensus in the country that Russia was to blame.

The West, which imports oil and gas via Georgia from the Caspian Sea, is watching for a possible repeat of a November 2007 crackdown, when police firing teargas and rubber bullets dispersed the last major demonstrations against Saakashvili.

Opposition leaders said there were at least 150,000 people in the streets, and accused the authorities of limiting public transport from western Georgia to Tbilisi. The government said there were only 25,000, and denied interfering.

"I have not seen such unity among Georgians for a long time," said protester Elene Gabriadze, a 47-year-old unemployed woman. "We will stand here until the end."

Fire crews and hundreds of police in riot gear lounged on the stone floor of the parliament courtyard.

Saakashvili's mainly Western-educated team came to power blessed by former U.S. president George W. Bush as a "beacon of liberty". But the light has faded and diplomats say Barack Obama's administration will be less forgiving of any crackdown.

Thursday's rally came on the 20th anniversary of Soviet troops' bloody crushing of pro-independence Georgian protests, two years before the Soviet Union collapsed.

Before the demonstration, Saakashvili joined a quiet vigil to remember the victims. "Georgia today, as never before, needs unity and firmness," he told reporters. "We are a democratic state and people have different opinions."

Fear of unrest has been fed by the authorities, who in March said they had uncovered a plot to overthrow the government by men with suspected links to the opposition. The opposition accused the authorities of conducting a smear campaign.

The European Union urged calm. "Both the authorities and opposition are aware what is at stake and of the importance ... of handling this event with the necessary restraint," EU South Caucasus envoy Peter Semneby said in Tbilisi.


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Demonstrators hold flags during an opposition rally in Tbilisi April 9, 2009. At least 60,000 Georgians rallied on Thursday at the start of a campaign to try to force President Mikheil ...



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Last updated:Thu Apr 9 16:36:08 2009