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Ukraine Strips Ex-Georgian President Saakashvili Of Citizenship

July 26, 2017 By administrator

Ukraine Strips Ex-Georgian President Saakashvili Of Citizenship KYIV — Ukraine’s migration agency says Mikheil Saakashvili, the former Georgian president who later served as governor of Ukraine’s Odesa region, has been stripped of his Ukrainian citizenship.

In a statement posted on July 26 on its website, the State Migration Service said the decision to revoke a person’s citizenship could be made only by Ukraine’s president.

It also explicitly mentioned Saakashvili, and suggested that paperwork received from Georgian officials had been included in the decision.

Ukraine’s TSN news agency quoted unnamed officials in the migration agency as saying that Saakashvili gave false information when he filled out application forms to obtain citizenship in 2015.

There was no comment or announcement by President Petro Poroshenko about the migration statement, or Saakashvili in particular.

Saakashvili also did not immediately offer any public comment about the development.

But officials with the Ukrainian political party he headed, called the “Movement of New Forces,” said in a post to Facebook that “Poroshenko, in the spirit of his predecessor, has irrevocably gone down the path of unconstitutional action for usurpation and holding onto power at all costs.”

Davit Sakvarelidze, a former deputy prosecutor-general and a representative of the Movement of New Forces, said Poroshenko’s decision to revoke Saakashvili’s citizenship would not impede the activities of the party.

“Ukraine is on the brink of survival and preserving itself as a state,” Sakvarelidze said in a Facebook post on July 26. “The man who had spoken about that louder than anyone else was left without Ukrainian citizenship and the right to enter Ukraine today. But it will by no means stop us… We will coordinate with the established headquarters in terms of further joint actions and go forward, taking all necessary measures.”

Sakvarelidze also said Poroshenko’s decision would “bring the end of the regime under his leadership closer.”

Georgian Criminal Charges

Poroshenko’s order is the latest setback to Saakashvili, a U.S.-educated lawyer who helped lead Georgia’s 2003 Rose Revolution — promising to reform the ex-Soviet republic and draw it closer to the West.

His policies angered Russia, however, and the growing acrimony paved the way for a brief, disastrous war in 2008 when Russia’s army invaded Georgia, humiliated Georgia’s U.S.-trained forces, and seized control of two of Georgia’s breakaway regions — South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

Saakashvili was widely unpopular when he left the Georgian presidency.

Georgian officials stripped him of his Georgian citizenship in December 2015 after he received a Ukrainian passport.

Saakashvili is now wanted in Tbilisi on criminal charges related to his activities when he was Georgia’s president, charges he has called politically motivated.

In Ukraine, Saakashvili had been seen as an ally of Poroshenko when he was appointed governor of Ukraine’s largest and most important port, Odesa, in May 2015.

He resigned from that post in November 2016, openly accusing Poroshenko of dishonesty and charging that the central government in Kyiv was sabotaging crucial reforms.

With reporting by RFE/RL’s Mike Eckel, Interfax, Strana.ua, TSN, and RIA

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: citizenship, Ex-Georgian, President Saakashvili, Ukraine Strips

Georgia Saakashvili stripped off Georgian citizenship

December 4, 2015 By administrator

f56619447f3be4_56619447f3c1f.thumbGeorgian President Giorgi Margvelashvili has stripped former President Mikheil Saakashvili of his Georgian citizenship, RFE/RL reported.

The move on December 4 comes a day after Justice Minister Tea Tsulukani recommended the action because Saakashvili also had Ukrainian citizenship.

Saakashvili has been working as the governor of Ukraine’s Odesa region since May.

Saakashvili, who introduced reforms during nearly a decade in power in Georgia following the 2003 Rose Revolution, left the ex-Soviet republic after his presidency ended in November 2013.

The government that came to power after beating his party in 2012 parliamentary elections has accused him of fraud, organization of an assault, and abuse of office — charges he denies.

Saakashvili’s United National Movement party condemned the decision, saying that the move was done to bar Saakashvili from taking part in parliamentary elections next year.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: citizenship, Georgia, Saakashvili

Authorities’ pressures force former MP candidate renounce Azerbaijani citizenship and seek asylum

November 6, 2015 By administrator

MP candidate renounce Azerbaijani citizenship

MP candidate renounce Azerbaijani citizenship

Former MP candidate, human rights defender and former convict Vidadi Iskenderli renounced Azerbaijani citizenship, Azerbaijani service of RFE/RL reports.

He sent a letter about his decision to President Ilham Aliyev and several local media outlets. He said the pressures he has faced over the recent years, as well as the arbitrariness reigning in the country forced him to make the decision. Moreover, pressure was exerted on him and his family members, which further backed his determination.

According to RFE/RL, Vidadi Iskenderli’s candidature was nominated in 89th Geychay-Agdash electoral district. Before the polling day, he complained at the Central Electoral Commission (CEC) that obstacles were made against his pre-election campaign. The Commission, however, found his appeal groundless. He sent further complaints after the polls were over; still the CEC returned the appeal to him on 5 November. Now Iskenderli intends to seek an asylum in a foreign country.

Bakhtiyar Hajiyev, the head of the Public Policy Institute and former political prisoner, told Turan news agency that the November 1 parliamentary elections were very dull and worse than the previous, 2010, campaign. He said the public interest for the elections was extremely low, and the new parliament is not very different from the previous one – the same figures, the same political forces and parties – with three fourth of the previous MPs remaining in the parliament.

Hajiyev divided the 27 new MPs into three groups. First, the “invisibles,” who come into sight only during the election campaign period, while no one sees or hears form them for five years. The second group is used by the authorities to sharply criticise the opposition, Europe and the US. The third group consists of young people, including graduates of Western universities. “They can carry out a useful work even within limited power. Nevertheless, they will not take up cardinal steps, like legislative initiatives, or control the government,” Bakhtiyar Hajiyev pointed out.

Trend agency reports that the CEC discussed 18 Musavat party members’ appeals during its regular meeting. In the appeals, the party members, MPs candidates, said the CEC’s disregard of their refusal of the candidacy was a violation of the voters’ will and pressure on them. The CEC, however, found the appeals groundless noting that Musavat party candidates had received less votes during the polls than the leading candidates, which means that the claims about the violation of the voters’ will are unjustified.

According to Trend, Tural Abbasli, from Musavat, said that talks about his dismissal from the party stated once he spoke about his intention to run for an MP. He added that he does not think his steps somehow violated the party regulations. However, in case the party chairman Arif Hajili makes the decision, he will be dismissed from the party like his opponents Gubad Ibadoglu, Sakhavat Alisoy and others were. “Sadly, this has become a reality in the party,” Abbasli said.

He highlighted that if dismissed from Musavat, he will struggle for his rights because he has been a member of the party for 15 years and has done a lot for it during that period.

Haqqin.az reports that the CEC of Azerbaijan rejected singer Elza Seidjahan’s appeal to declare null the results of the 54th Shabran-Siyazan electoral district.  The CEC experts came to the conclusion that the singer’s complaints were not justified and there are no results to declare null the polls results. The website reminds that earlier Elza Seidjahan had reported falsifications during the polls in her district, as well as pressure on her representatives.

The CEC meeting also discussed Umid Party chairman Igbal Agazade’s complaint. He nominated his candidacy in Khatain 3rd electoral district 35. He, too, asked to declare null the poll results at the 17, 18 and 26 polling stations of his district. An expert group investigation found that the appeal had arrived at the CEC in violation of the current rules, and that is why the CEC redirected it to be considered at the District Electoral Commission.

Haqqin.az reminds that according to the preliminary calculations, at the 35th Khatain electoral district, the chairman of the Social Democratic Party of Azerbaijan, Araz Alizade, won Igbal Agazade, who had more than once been elected an MP from that district.

On 1 November, Azerbaijan held elections, where 767 candidates were struggling for the 125 seats in the Parliament. According to preliminary data issued by the CEC, the ruling Yeni Azerbiajan party won, receiving 70 seats in the legislative body of the country. The voter turnout was 55.7 percent: 2.89 million voters out of 5.2 million took part in the elections.

The elections were observed by 503 international monitors from 40 organisations, including PACE, Interparliamentary Assembly of the CIS and the Parliamentary Assembly of Turkic-speaking Countries. There were reports about numerous irregularities in the polling stations. In particular, there were cases of ballot stuffing, voting carousels, and so on.

International agencies took up rather stern stance over the upcoming parliamentary elections. The OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR) announced that, due to restrictions imposed by the Azerbaijani authorities, ODIHR had no choice but to cancel its mission to observe the country’s parliamentary elections. The European Parliament followed the suit.

Source: Panorama.am

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbajain, candidate renounce Azerbaijani, citizenship

Georgia threatens to strip ex-leader Saakashvili’s citizenship

June 1, 2015 By administrator

TBILISI – Agence France-Presse

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko (L) hands over an identification card to former Georgian President Mikheil

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko (L) hands over an identification card to former Georgian President Mikheil

Georgia has threatened to revoke pro-Western former president Mikheil Saakashvili’s citizenship after he was granted a Ukrainian passport and appointed as governor of the strategic Odessa region.

Georgian President Giorgi Margvelashvili said Saakashvili’s move, which according to the constitution, could lead to the loss of Georgian citizenship, “insulted our state.”

“The (former) Georgian president should not have given up his Georgian citizenship,” he said in televised comments late Sunday.

The appointment on May 30 of the flamboyant Saakashvili, who fought a war with Russia, as head of Ukraine’s southern coastal region is a pointed signal from Kiev to Moscow that it remains set on its pro-European course despite a bloody separatist conflict in the east blamed on the Kremlin.

Georgia’s Justice Minister, Tea Tsulukiani, said Saakashvili will remain a Georgian national until the current president formally revokes his citizenship by a special decree.

“Let this hang upon him as a sword of Damocles. It will be a political decision and we will take it whenever we want,” she told journalists on May 31.

Saakashvili has recently been living in exile after authorities last year issued an arrest warrant for him on abuse of power charges that he insists are politically motivated.

A slew of Saakashvili’s top allies have been investigated and some jailed since his United National Movement party was defeated in parliamentary and presidential elections in 2012 and 2013 by the Georgian Dream coalition.

The United States and European Union have voiced concerns over what they perceive as a witch-hunt against Saakashvili and his entourage.

Last year, authorities seized Saakashvili’s two-hectare vineyard in east Georgia, a small apartment belonging to him in Tbilisi, his wife’s flat in the capital, tiny plots of land owned by his mother and grandmother, and his grandmother’s 10-year-old Toyota car.

During his time at the helm in Georgia, Saakashvili, 47, became an arch-nemesis of the Russian leadership as he dragged his tiny ex-Soviet homeland out of Moscow’s orbit and closer to the West.

The collapse in relations spiralled into open conflict in 2008 when Russia defeated Georgia in a five-day war over the breakaway region of South Ossetia.

Reformist Saakashvili is hugely popular in Ukraine for his anti-Kremlin stance, but is a deeply divisive figure in Georgia due to the painful reforms he introduced.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: citizenship, Georgia, Saakashvili's, strip

Egypt court mulls revoking Bilal Erdoğan’s citizenship, given to him by Morsi

May 25, 2015 By administrator

President Erdoğan's son Bilal Erdoğan (Photo: DHA)

President Erdoğan’s son Bilal Erdoğan (Photo: DHA)

Egypt has been mulling over revoking the Egyptian citizenship granted to President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan‘s son Bilal during the term of former President Mohammed Morsi, and a court case concerning the matter continues, in the latest step of rancor that could bring bilateral relations between the two countries to a new low.

The case concerning the possible revocation of Bilal Erdoğan‘s citizenship has been postponed to October, according to Egyptian media.

According to the claims in the Egyptian al-Masry al-Youm daily on Sunday, Morsi, who was ousted from office in a military coup in June 2013, had given Bilal Erdoğan Egyptian citizenship on April 13, 2013, two months prior to the military intervention. Now the case being overseen by the Egyptian Supreme Court over whether to revoke the citizenship of Bilal, among others, has been postponed until October.

The report also claimed that Bilal had used the Egyptian passport issued to him by the previous administration to flee to Georgia after a huge corruption scandal went public on Dec. 17, 2013. The graft investigation, the largest of its kind in Turkey’s history, incriminated four former Cabinet ministers, their families, prominent businesspeople and several members of then-Prime Minister Erdoğan’s family on charges of bribery and transferring gold to Iran in order to undermine US-led sanctions.

According to al-Masry al-Youm, Egyptian citizenship was also granted not only to Bilal Erdoğan but also to several other Turks deemed close to the Hamas administration in Palestine and by extension to the Muslim Brotherhood administration in Egypt. Morsi was sentenced to death in May, nearly three years after he became Egypt’s first freely elected president, on charges arising from the killing of protesters during demonstrations in 2012.

Bilal Erdoğan claims al-Masry al-Youm report work of ‘parallel structure’

The Foundation of Youth and Education in Turkey (TÜRGEV) denied the allegations on Monday, calling them “slander and lies” and continued by claiming the reports were a part of a “character assassination.” It also stated that Bilal Erdoğan is not an Egyptian citizen and did not use an Egyptian passport to flee to Georgia.

Bilal Erdoğan also claimed that the report in al-Masry al-Youm was the doing of the “parallel structure,” a term invented by his father to vilify the faith-based Gülen movement, also known as the Hizmet movement. “I will not flee the country I was born in and worked for due to the lies of a network of espionage and treason concealed as a movement [referring to the Hizmet movement], or [one of] their hired gun newspapers,” Bilal was quoted as saying.

Erdoğan and the AK Party government have launched a self-declared war against the Hizmet movement, inspired by the ideas of Turkish Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen, after a corruption probe went public on Dec. 17, 2013, incriminating senior members of the government, the sons of three former ministers and government-affiliated figures as well as family members of then-Prime Minister Erdoğan.

Bilal’s name has been in the spotlight ever since a voice recording surfaced allegedly featuring the voice of then-Prime Minister Erdoğan ordering Bilal to dispose of vast amounts of cash — reportedly as much as $1 billion — during the corruption operation which went public on Dec. 17, 2013. During five wiretapped phone conversations, a voice alleged to be that of Erdoğan is heard telling his son to dispose of large sums of money hidden in several relatives’ homes on the day police raided a number of locations as part of the operation.

Towards the end of the recordings, Bilal Erdoğan tells his father that he and others have “finished the tasks you gave us,” implying that the whole sum was “zeroed.”

Bilal also made headlines more recently when the BMZ Group, a company owned by Bilal and other family members, purchased a tanker at a cost of $18 million. The tanker, given the name “Poet Qabil,” is the fourth acquired by the BMZ group.

Source: ZAMAN

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Bilal-Erdoğan’s, citizenship, eygept, revoking

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