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- WORLD, Page 38World NotesGEORGIAHere He Comes Again
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- Two weeks ago, Georgians had every reason to think that Zviad
- Gamsakhurdia wouldn't be on hand to kick them around anymore.
- The ousted President, elected with 87% of the vote only seven
- months earlier, had seen his popularity collapse amid charges of
- repression and high-handedness. Gamsakhurdia had fled the
- capital of Tbilisi after the surging opposition successfully
- launched a 16-day siege. Last week he reappeared in western
- Georgia calling for a massive offensive "to do away with the
- junta" that had replaced him.
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- Neighboring Armenia had granted Gamsakhurdia a safe haven
- on condition that he abstain from politics. Ten days later, he
- allegedly flew to nearby Chechen-Ingush, a rebellious region in
- Russia. From there he made his way to Zugdidi, center of his
- traditional power base, where his supporters were gathering.
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- The ruling Military Council in Tbilisi braced for trouble.
- It ordered troops to the western region, accused Armenia of
- trying to provoke civil war and charged the ousted President
- with abuse of power, embezzlement and inciting ethnic hatreds.
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- Since Georgia is already facing ethnic conflicts in the
- regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, Gamsakhurdia's latest
- move seemed likely to bring his country to the brink of the
- civil war that he has been calling for.
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