On Feb 13, 2:35=A0pm, lorad...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
> It doesn't look as though soulfull-eyed Pootey-poot has been
> sufficiently chastized by the UK's diplomatic protestations regarding
> the kremlin's previous offing of Litvinenko with polonium..
>
> http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5h1Ha4ZDM64Yb3ar5AqjABuytAtPAD8UPKJUO1
>
Hey, Mamma's Hui, do you ever read more than the first line of the
sources you post? What kind of an idiot would post a link so cru****ng
to his own cause?
But thanks. It was very useful.
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http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5h1Ha4ZDM64Yb3ar5AqjABuytAtPAD8UPKJUO1
Associated Press
Patarkatsishvili was a leader and financer of a Georgia protest
movement that sought to unseat President Mikhail Saakashvili, a former
political ally who has been accused of having authoritarian leanings
since ordering a crackdown on opponents in November.
Campaigning from Britain, Patarkatsishvili ran for president in
Georgia's election last month, fini****ng third. Opposition groups
allege the election was rigged.
Patarkatsishvili told the AP on Dec. 26 that he had obtained a tape
recording of an official in his homeland's Interior Ministry asking a
Chechen warlord to murder the tycoon in London. "I believe they want
to kill me," he said. .. He said the tape had been given to police.
Patarkatsishvili was under investigation in Georgia on charges of
plotting to overthrow the government. He denied the accusation, but
acknowledged offering a senior official $100 million if Georgian
police agreed not to use force against street protests after the
January election.
He left Georgia in November and lived in self-imposed exile in Britain
and Israel.
Among Patarkatsishvili's businesses was the Imedi television station
in Georgia. The station had been critical of Saakashvili's government
and is closed, at least tem****arily.
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