Wednesday, February 15, 2012


Georgia

Georgian Parliament Requests FM's Resignation

Foreign Minister Salome Zourabichvili (file photo)

Tbilisi, 18 October 2005 -- The Georgian parliament's Foreign Affairs Committee decided today to ask Prime Minister Zurab Noghaideli to dismiss Foreign Minister Salome Zourabichvili, the Caucasus Press reported.

TEXT SIZE - +
They said that if Noghaideli refuses to do so, they will raise the issue of impeaching Zourabichvili. The deputy speaker of parliament, Mikheil Machavariani, said that several ambassadors have accused Zourabichvili -- a career French diplomat whom Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili persuaded early last year to join the Georgian government -- of protectionism, nepotism, ignoring subordinates' requests to contact them, and ordering ambassadors to report directly to her rather than to the parliament.
In another poll she was rated by 46 percent of respondents as the most popular of the government ministers.


The demand for Zourabichvili's resignation culminates a week of concerted criticism of her by parliament deputies. During a protracted discussion on 11-12 October, several parliament deputies lambasted Zourabichvili for her ministry's tardiness in submitting to the legislature the European Convention on National Minorities. Georgia pledged to ratify that convention when it joined the Council of Europe six years ago, and legislators duly did so on 13 October, Caucasus Press reported.

The Foreign Ministry rejected the personal criticism of Zourabichvili, who was visiting the U.K. and Ireland, as "groundless" and "unsubstantiated," and protested the "insulting" tone adopted during the debate by parliamentarian David Kirkitadze of the majority United National Movement (GEM), the Caucasus Press reported on 14 October. On 17 October, deputies representing the GEM took issue with the Foreign Ministry riposte and demanded that whichever official drafted it be reprimanded; speaker Nino Burdjanadze commented that even former Interior Minister Kakha Targamadze "never dared" to criticize the parliament in such terms.

This was not the first time the parliament has targeted Zourabichvili. In September 2004, Burdjanadze raised at a session of the parliament bureau Zourabichvili's imputed responsibility for the likelihood that Georgia would be stripped of its voting rights at the UN for its failure over many years to pay its membership dues (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 25 and 26 February 2003 and 21 September 2004).

The bureau on that occasion considered, but then abandoned, the idea of seeking Zourabichvili's impeachment. And in June, the opposition Conservative parliament faction demanded that Zourabichvili appear before parliament and explain to deputies why she receives a monthly salary of 15,000 euros ($17,900) as a French diplomat in addition to the 3,000 laris ($1,700) she receives from the Georgian government, the Caucasus Press reported on 11 June.

Elena Tevdoradze, who chairs the parliament committee on human rights and is one of Zourabichvili's most outspoken critics, denied on 17 October that personal animosity plays any role in deputies' repeated criticisms of Zourabichvili. In a poll conducted by the weekly "Kviris palitra" and summarized on 9 August by the Caucasus Press, 70 percent of the 500 respondents identified Zourabichvili as the most intelligent member of the government. In another poll two months earlier, she was rated by 46 percent of respondents as the most popular among the government ministers, the Caucasus Press reported on 6 June.

For more news about events in Georgia, see RFE/RL's webpage News and Features on Georgia

You Might Also Like

Prospect Of Vote-Rigging Overshadows Upcoming Armenian Parliamentary Election

The Armenian parliamentary elections due in May will not simply be a struggle between rival political parties with diverging priorities and platforms. More

South Ossetian Opposition Leader Hospitalized After Raid

Alla Dzhioyeva, the opposition candidate whose victory in a runoff ballot in November for de facto president of Georgia's breakaway region of South Ossetia was swiftly annulled by the republic's Supreme Court, was taken to a hospital after a raid by some 200 masked security personnel on her headquarters in Tskhinvali. More

Repeat South Ossetian Election Campaign Gathers Momentum

The run-up to the repeat election on March 24 for a new de facto president of Georgia's breakaway Republic of South Ossetia bears an uncanny resemblance to last November's election campaign. More

Most Popular

               
 
 
 
 
Being Discussed Now

Iranian Bomber Wounded In Bangkok

Latest Comment (1 total)

arash: As I've said before this terrorist regime must be thrown out of the ... More

Kosovo Serbs To Vote In Referendum

Latest Comment (4 total)

Eugenio: Ah, Alija, your open-hearted admission of desire to cleanse the ethnic Serbs from ... More

U.S. Hearing On Balochistan Raises Hackles, Awareness In Pakistan

Latest Comment (11 total)

Mah: Really? You wanna divide Balochistan? That's the outrageous idea I've heard so far. ... More