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Former Georgian president Saakashvili is detained in Ukraine | Former Georgian president Saakashvili is detained in Ukraine |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Ukraine has detained the former Georgian president Mikheil Saakashvili on suspicion of assisting a criminal organisation, the SBU state security service has said, an offence that could land him in prison for up to five years. | |
Masked officers dragged Saakashvili from an apartment in the capital, Kiev, while his supporters protested on the street and tried to stop the police van from leaving. | |
It is the latest twist in a prolonged feud between Ukrainian authorities and Saakashvili, who was invited to become a regional governor after protests in 2014 ousted a pro-Russian president but quickly fell out with the president, his one-time ally Petro Poroshenko. | |
Addressing supporters earlier from the roof of the house, Saakashvili had accused Poroshenko of being a traitor and a thief. He tried to address the crowd again as he was being bundled into a blue minivan, which was then surrounded by protesters. | |
“What they are doing is lawlessness in the eyes of the whole world,” Saakashvili said. “I urge all Ukrainians to take to the streets and drive out the thieves.” | |
Saakashvili made a dramatic return to Ukraine in September, barging his way across the border from Poland despite having been stripped of Ukrainian citizenship and facing the threat of possible extradition to Georgia. | |
He wants to unseat Poroshenko and replace him with a new, younger politician. | |
Saakashvili was appointed governor of the Odessa region in 2015 on the strength of the reforms he carried out in Georgia. | |
But he quit in 2016 after falling out with Poroshenko, accusing him of corruption, while Poroshenko’s office said Saakashvili was trying to deflect from his own shortcomings as an administrator. | |
Saakashvili divides opinion. Supporters see him as a fearless crusader against corruption but critics say there is little substance behind his blustery rhetoric. | |
Back home in Georgia, where he took power after a peaceful pro-western uprising, known as the Rose Revolution, in 2003, his time in office was tarnished by what critics said was his monopolising power and exerting pressure on the judiciary. | |
He was president at the time of a disastrous five-day war with Russia in 2008, a conflict that his critics argued was the result of his own miscalculations. | |
The 49-year-old is now wanted on criminal charges in Georgia, which he says were trumped up for political reasons. |