Jaba Ioseliani
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Jaba Ioseliani | |
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ჯაბა იოსელიანი | |
Member of The Military Council of Georgia | |
In office 6 January 1992 – 10 March 1992 Serving with Tengiz Kitovani | |
Preceded by | Zviad Gamsakhurdia (as President of Georgia) |
Succeeded by | Eduard Shevardnadze (as Chairman Of The State Council of Georgia) |
Leader Of Mkhedrioni | |
In office 1989–1995 | |
Preceded by | Position established |
Succeeded by | Position abolished |
Member of the Parliament of Georgia | |
In office 1992–1995 | |
Personal details | |
Born | Khashuri, Georgian SSR, Transcaucasian SFSR, Soviet Union | 10 July 1926
Died | 4 March 2003 Tbilisi, Georgia | (aged 76)
Nationality | Soviet (1926–1991) Georgian (1991–2003) |
Jaba (or Dzhaba) Ioseliani (Georgian ჯაბა იოსელიანი; 10 July 1926 – 4 March 2003) was a Georgian politician, writer, thief-in-law and leader of the paramilitary and criminal Mkhedrioni organisation.
Born in Khashuri, Georgia, Ioseliani majored in Oriental studies at Leningrad University but did not graduate. He staged a bank robbery in Leningrad in 1948, for which he served 17 years in a Soviet jail. Released in 1965, he later served another sentence for manslaughter. He eventually returned to his native Georgia and graduated from the Georgian Institute of Theater Arts, where he became a professor. He wrote a number of popular plays.
Ioseliani rose to prominence as the leader of the Mkhedrioni, a heavily armed paramilitary group which he founded in 1989. He attempted to take control of large areas of Abkhazia and South Ossetia with the goal of defeating regional separatist elements. In February 1991, his organisation was outlawed by President Zviad Gamsakhurdia and he was imprisoned along with other Mkhedrioni members. In response, Ioseliani accused Gamsakhurdia of trying to take control of state media and silence rivals.
In December 1991, Ioseliani escaped from prison and joined forces with rebel members of the Georgian National Guard to launch a violent coup d'état that forced President Zviad Gamsakhurdia out of office in January 1992. He was one of the three leaders of the "Military Council" that ruled Georgia from January–March 1992. He subsequently became a powerful figure in the government of President Eduard Shevardnadze, who was forced to rely heavily on Mkhedrioni militiamen because of the weakness of the state security forces. Ioseliani made it clear who he thought was the senior partner: his office in the Georgian Parliament building was located directly above Shevardnadze's and he was constantly surrounded with armed followers wherever he went.[1]
Ioseliani played a major role in the disastrous attempt to enforce Georgian rule in the separatist province of Abkhazia, which ended in a crushing defeat for government and Mkhedrioni forces in August–September 1993. Despite this, he was given a formal government position in September 1993 to enforce a national state of emergency. This gave him almost unlimited powers to detain people. He used these powers enthusiastically, imposing a severely repressive regime that was widely criticised by international human rights organisations. Supporters of the ousted Gamsakhurdia were vigorously targeted, especially in the pro-Gamsakhurdia region of Samegrelo in western Georgia, where the Mkhedrioni were accused of carrying out a number of extrajudicial killings. There were also widespread allegations that Ioseliani and his supporters were systematically "taxing" businesses and individuals in areas under their control.
On 29 August 1995, Shevardnadze narrowly escaped assassination in a bomb attack. The attack was blamed on a shadowy coalition of "mafia forces" including Ioseliani and others. Ioseliani was detained in November 1998 and held for three years pending trial, then sentenced to 11 years for banditry, terrorism, and conspiring to kill Shevardnadze. He denied the charges and was eventually released in the spring of 2000 in a general amnesty of convicts. He suffered a heart attack on 26 February 2003 and died in a Tbilisi hospital a week later. He is buried in the Pantheon of Didube, Tbilisi.[2]
References[]
- ^ Bonner, Raymond (16 November 1993). "Georgian Fighter Wields Guns, Money and Charm". The New York Times.
- ^ "Dzhaba Ioseliani, 76; Oft-Imprisoned Leader of Georgian Paramilitary Force". Los Angeles Times. 5 March 2003.
External links[]
- Jaba Ioseliani. Violent warlord in post-Communist Georgia[dead link] The Independent. 25 March 2003. (access on 21 August. 2008)
- Александр КРЫЛОВ (Aleksandr Krylov) Забытые уроки Джабы Иоселиани (Forgetting lesson of Dzhaba Ioselani) НОВАЯ ПОЛИТИКА (Novaya Politika - New Policy) 6 March 2006. (access on 21 August. 2008) (In Russian)
- Photograph of Jaba Ioseliani
- 1926 births
- 2003 deaths
- Burials at Didube Pantheon
- People from Shida Kartli
- Svan people
- Politicians from Georgia (country)
- Military personnel from Georgia (country)
- Rebels from Georgia (country)
- People from Georgia (country) convicted of manslaughter
- Prisoners and detainees of the Soviet Union
- Prisoners and detainees from Georgia (country)
- Thieves in law
- Georgian bank robbers
- Gangsters from Georgia (country)
- Leaders who took power by coup