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Irakli Gharibashvili shares a letter

Irakli Gharibashvili shares a letter
Irakli Gharibashvili shares a letter

The Prime Minister of Georgia, Irakli Gharibashvili, has released an open letter regarding the entry of the third President of Georgia, Mikheil Saakashvili.

According to Irakli Gharibashvili, Mikheil Saakashvili's psychological and mental condition has changed radically after his imprisonment; the United National Movement is concerned that their leader is in critical condition and demands his immediate release from prison.

The Prime Minister writes that Mikheil Saakashvili entered Georgia not to go to prison, but with a revolutionary scenario, but he was met with a well-organized system.

"Probably many of our fellow citizens think about what motivated Mikheil Saakashvili when he planned his arrival in Georgia.

The versions may be different. Some feel that the thirst for power, selfishness, and jealousy towards other leaders of the United National Movement and the wish to be in the center of the attention made him go to prison.

Some think he came back intending to overthrow the government, of which he was deeply convinced of the success. There is also talk that it was difficult to calculate the consequences of his decision due to his heavy drug addiction.

Mikheil Saakashvili's psychological and mental condition before and after his imprisonment changed radically. The "National Movement" is worried that their leader is in a difficult situation and demands his immediate release from prison. They say that he is neither Merabishvili nor Akhalaia, and he will not tolerate staying in prison for a long time. This situation was taken seriously by the team; however, they do not know what to do.

As for the versions of Saakashvili's arrival mentioned above, I consider the version that Mikheil Saakashvili deliberately went to prison and planned it in advance absurd. Especially if he wanted to, then he would enter and go to jail not as a thief and in violation of the law, but as a man (no matter how irrelevant it may sound to Saakashvili). By doing so, he would intensify his own message of political imprisonment. Now that he has entered Georgia by committing a new crime, he has even removed the formal basis for this message.

Blaming an illogical decision on drugs is also absurd, I think. No matter how addicted a person is, he always has enough time to take an illogical step back.

Therefore, the most logical version is that Saakashvili arrived in Georgia not with the intention of going to prison but with a strong hope of a coup d'etat.

I would also like to tell the public that Saakashvili's revolutionary intentions were doomed to failure in all cases. According to his plan, even if he suddenly appeared on Rustaveli Avenue on October 3, the police would use a water cannon or sparkling gas to disperse their gathering of 5 000 people and arrest Saakashvili with ease. Saakashvili may not remember that Prime Minister Giorgi Gakharia is not a member of the government team, which is united today as never before.

The question naturally arises, then, what gave Saakashvili hope for success. There remains a sense of failure to find a logical reason for Saakashvili's arrival.

I think that the answer to this question should be sought in the recent history of Georgia and in their past experience while in the power of the "National Movement."

We all remember that Georgia was the first to restore state independence. There was great enthusiasm, but we had no experience, and soon after independence, we killed the first president. After that, the elderly Shevardnadze arrived in Georgia, during whose presidency the state was completely weakened due to Mkhedrioni's and extreme corruption. Against this background, in 2003, Saakashvili and the United National Movement easily gained power by overthrowing the government by throwing stones. The state and institutions were so weakened that Shevardnadze could no longer even control the personal security service.

The "National Movement" has caused all kinds of trouble to the country for nine years. They were allowed to do everything and committed numerous crimes, including seizing almost all media outlets and presenting all their failures as successes. Saakashvili sang himself "Misha Magaria" and believed his own lies. In fact, the "National Movement" is a group of losers with criminal tendencies who can not plan and manage anything properly. Saakashvili planned to arrive in Georgia and overthrow the government with exactly the same "success" as he had ruled the country in his time, so is his team, the National Movement, and that is why their nine years in government and nine years in opposition have become an 18-year history of failure.

However, they also failed to take into account the fact that instead of the weakened state institutions of 2003, they now have well-organized state institutions. They thought they could easily implement the plan. However, even in this case, they became victims of their own lies. For years, the National Movement and its propaganda party television stations have been trying to establish a false perception of a "collapsed state," and this lie is clearly self-evident. In fact, instead of a "collapsed state," Saakashvili saw a well-organized state system in Georgia.

All this explains the radical change in Saakashvili's mental state before and after his imprisonment - he entered the prison with a smile, and now he wants nothing more than to get out of prison," Irakli Gharibashvili writes on Facebook.

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