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World

Georgia's foreign chief quits amid govt tensions

Misha Dzhindzhikhashvili - The Philippine Star

TBILISI — Georgia's foreign minister and three of her deputies resigned yesterday, alleging that the firing of the defense minister a day earlier was politically motivated and endangers the ex-Soviet nation's aim of eventually joining NATO and the European Union.

The events highlight growing tensions between the Georgian Dream party and the Free Democrats in the country's governing coalition over corruption and the aim to integrate with the West and fend off the influence of neighboring Russia.

The Georgian Dream party was founded by billionaire and former prime minister Bidzina Ivanishvili, who made his fortune in Russia. Even though he has expressed repeated support for Georgia's pro-West course, he has also worked to improve relations with Russia, and has been labelled a Kremlin pawn by foes.

Prime Minister Irakli Garibashvili, a Georgian Dream member, has come under fire recently from critics who say he did not adequately react against a proposed integration agreement by Russia and the Georgian separatist region of Abkhazia, which declared independence after the countries' brief war in 2008 and is outside Tbilisi's control.

Garibashvili on Tuesday fired defense minister Irakli Alasania — a Free Democrats member — amid an investigation into corruption in the military. Later the same day European Integration Minister Aleksi Petriashvili resigned in protest and on yesterday, Foreign Minister Maya Panjikidze and three of her deputies followed suit. They are all members of the Free Democrats.

Panjikidze, who is Alasania's sister-in-law, said she resigned because his dismissal was a political attack on pro-Western figures.

President Giorgi Margvelashvili gave a similar assessment of the brewing political crisis on Tuesday, saying political opposition is "creating a threat to the Euro-Atlantic integration of the country."

Political analyst Gia Nodia said the political infighting "doesn't mean that the current government is changing its foreign-policy direction which is oriented toward the West."

"That's a choice made by the Georgian people and the authorities can't go against it," he said.

BIDZINA IVANISHVILI

EUROPEAN INTEGRATION MINISTER ALEKSI PETRIASHVILI

EUROPEAN UNION

FOREIGN MINISTER MAYA PANJIKIDZE

FREE DEMOCRATS

GIA NODIA

IRAKLI ALASANIA

MINISTER

PRESIDENT GIORGI MARGVELASHVILI

PRIME MINISTER IRAKLI GARIBASHVILI

RUSSIA AND THE GEORGIAN

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