Abkhazia’s Supreme Court president quits under pressure

Published: 20 October 2004 y., Wednesday
The president of the Supreme Court in Georgia’s breakaway republic of Abkhazia resigned Monday after coming under pressure to annul the results of the recent "presidential" election won by the opposition candidate, a justice ministry source said. The source said that Alla Avidzba’s resignation had been accepted. Opposition candidate Sergei Bagapsh was declared the winner of the October 3 poll with 50.8 percent of the vote, but his main rival, former premier Raul Khajimba, a government candidate supported by Moscow, has challenged the result. The court is due to rule before Friday on the validity of the election’s outcome amid daily street protests in the tiny region on the Black Sea that once served as a prime vacation spot for the Soviet elite. An opposition newspaper said that it had been told that it could not be printed because of technical problems, though a pro-government paper was not affected. "The paintworks told me it cannot publish all Abkhazia’s newspapers," Inal Kashiq, editor of Chegenskaya Pravda said.
Šaltinis:
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Pope Praises Azerbaijanis For Their Religious Attitude

Pope John Paul II met on November 18 with a delegation of religious leaders from Azerbaijan more »

10 Years Later

Ashgabat More Affluent, But Poisoned By 'Atmosphere Of Political Repression' more »

The Press Conference

Kazakhstan’s National Security Committee liquidated an Al-Qaeda group more »

Caucasus protest tests Russia's regional policy

Protesters were dug in last night at a government office in southern Russia, demanding the resignation of the region's president after gangland-style killings more »

Eastern European migration 'far exceeds estimate'

Many more workers have arrived in Britain from Eastern Europe since enlargement of the EU in May than the Government predicted, figures showed yesterday more »

15 years on: Berlin Wall legacy still divides Germans

Touted by the East German leadership as a barrier against "fascist provocation," the Wall was really an attempt to stop waves of skilled workers and educated people leaving a repressive state more »

Jailed Yukos chief exits money dream

After a year in jail on charges of fraud and tax evasion, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, Russia's richest man, has told his family that he will give up making money if he is released more »

Deadly derailment in southern England

A train crash in southern England has left at least six people dead more »

Ukrainians protest alleged election fraud

Tens of thousands of supporters of presidential candidate Viktor Yushchenko filled Kiev's main square Saturday more »

"No Signs of a Massive Surge of Labour"

Estonia's six months in EU have brought no massive changes for Finland more »