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Georgia Opposition Calls for Day of Rage Protest

A Georgian opposition party called for a “Day of Rage” Wednesday to try to force President Mikheil Saakashvili to resign after police used teargas and rubber bullets against protesters in the capital, Reuters reports.

The protesters, who numbered around 10,000 Saturday, accuse Saakashvili of imposing autocratic rule on the former Soviet republic that sits on energy transit routes from the Caspian to western Europe.

Echoing language used to rally protesters in the uprisings in the Arab world, Sozar Subari, chairman of the opposition Georgian Party, said: “We are calling our supporters to come to the rally on May 25 and we call this day ‘Day of Rage’.”

He told a news conference Sunday the state was using its power against its own people.

An Interior Ministry spokesperson said the police had intervened when a group of 10 protesters started smashing the windows of a police car with metal poles. Protesters had camped out in Tbilisi overnight.

“Police used teargas and rubber bullets against that aggressive group of protesters … There was no intention to disperse the rally,” spokesperson Shota Utiashvili said.

Protesters said a group of them attacked the police car because they wanted to release an activist who had been detained. Independent Maestro television reported that one woman was taken to hospital.

By early evening, 2,000 people gathered near TV building in Tbilisi to hear about what further action was planned.

“Our doors are open to other opposition political parties. We expect that more people will join our protest and this regime will be over very soon,” Nino Burjanadze, former Saakashvili ally and parliament speaker, told the crowd.

May 25, the day of the next announced rally, falls on the day before Georgia marks its 20th anniversary of independence Thursday.

Opponents of the pro-Western Saakashvili accuse him of monopolising power since the 2003 “Rose Revolution” that ousted the post-Soviet old guard in the Caucasus state.

Weakened by the brief war with Russia in 2008, Saakashvili has since reasserted control, aided by an ineffective and patchy opposition.

Photo: AP