Badri Patarkatsishvili - the Jewish opposition to Georgia´s President Saakashvili
- is just another Zionist
By Freedom Research, 2007
The opposition to the Israel-loving Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili is also in Jewish hands, in the form of the Media Jew Badri Patarkatsishvili, reportedly the wealthiest man from Georgia. Patarkatsishvili cooperates with Zionist Rupert Murdoch and has close business ties with Russian-Jewish tycoon Boris Berezovsky who he had contacts with in the 1990´s, during their common reign of the Russian TV-channel ORT. Patarkatsishvili also has shown interest in the Israeli media sphere trying to acquire the Israeli daily newspaper Ma´ariv.
Patarkatsishvili is acccused of mafia methods organizing an attempted escape from prison of Berezovsky-ally Nikolay Glushkov, and an alleged grand fraud. He was also rumored to be linked to MSI (Media Sports Investment) investment group, which is suspected of money laundering in Brazil. It has also been alleged that Patarkatsishvili's name was linked to several notorious murders in Russia and Georgia.
Radio Free Europe for example writes in a lengthy article on Patarkatsishvili on its homepage (October 12, 2007):
Closet Full Of SkeletonsThe low profile, however, hasn't prevented Patarkatsishvili from being associated with a number of prominent scandals and unresolved crimes left over from the 1990s. Russia has put out several warrants for his arrest, including one tied to charges in 2001 that he organized an attempt by Nikolai Glushkov, Aeroflot's deputy director-general, to escape from police custody. He and Berezovsky were both named by the Russian media as potential suspects in the 1995 murder of ORT Director Vladislav Listyev, and for rumored murky dealings in Chechnya.
Patarkatsishvili has also raised eyebrows in recent months with his close ties to Andrei Lugovoi, the ex-KGB agent named by Britain as a primary suspect in the November 2006 murder of former Russian security officer Aleksandr Litvinenko. Lugovoi and Patarkatsishvili were seen socializing in Tbilisi just weeks before Litvinenko's poisoning in London; the two men describe each other as "friends" and "old partners."
Radio Free Europe writes further, in the same article:
He also enjoyed strong support abroad, bringing Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation in as a partner in Imedi. Additionally, he has repeatedly sought to present himself as having close ties to Israeli officialdom and the World Jewish Congress.
So we shall look further into this Georgian-Jewish power figure who "repeatedly sought to present himself as having close ties to Israeli officialdom and the World Jewish Congress".
Underlines in the two articles below have been added by Radio Islam for the sake of empahsis.
Tycoon helps foes of Georgia's presidentBy Mike Eckel, Associated Press Writer
AP, Nov 8, 2007
MOSCOW - He's thought to be Georgia's wealthiest man, but Badri Patarkatsishvili is known these days for politics as a driving force in the opposition movement that led the embattled president to turn police on protesters and declare a state of emergency.He even handed over his control of Georgia's most popular TV station last month to Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. so he could concentrate on pursuing his longtime goal of driving President Mikhail Saakashvili from office.
"I will do everything and give all my strength and all my resources to free Georgia from this fascist regime," Patarkatsishvili said in a radio interview Thursday. "I do not think this government will remain for long."
The pro-Western government has accused Patarkatsishvili and other foes of creating unrest at the bidding of the Kremlin, which Saakashvili has angered by working to lessen Russian influence and move this former Soviet republic into close ties with NATO and the European Union.
Although he made his fortune in post-Soviet Russia before returning to his native Georgia, Patarkatsishvili denies any links to the regime in Moscow, noting he has been charged with fraud by Russian authorities.
He also is a close associate of Russian billionaire Boris Berezovsky, who lives in exile in London and is a fierce critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
"One can hardly accuse me of being on the side of the Russian authorities," Patarkatsishvili said in the interview with Ekho Moskvy radio, speaking from Israel.
Patarkatsishvili built up the Imedia television station into Georgia's most popular channel, and it has broadcast highly critical reports of Saakashvili's administration.
Last month, he transferred his controlling stake in the station to News Corp., saying he wanted to devote his efforts to support opposition parties.
The station broadcast live coverage Wednesday of riot police violently breaking up an opposition protest in the center of the capital, Tblisi. That evening, masked policemen raided Imedia's headquarters, assaulting journalists, smashing equipment and taking the station off the air.
Under a state of emergency imposed by Saakashvili late Wednesday, all news broadcasts were banned except on state-controlled TV.
Murdoch deplored the attack in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. He said that managers had been working to make Imdeia's reporting less partisan since News Corp. took control and that Patarkatsishvili no longer had any editorial oversight.
"We have instructed, we have monitored to make sure that every news broadcast is absolutely fair and balanced and down the middle," he said. "But apparently (the authorities) weren't watching. We invited them to come on the air and put their case and instead 200 goons turned up and smashed the place up. And the people."
"We're shocked and horrified that in what was allegedly a democratic country something like this could happen ... that, effectively, stations are put off the air," Murdoch said.
Saakashvili rose to the presidency almost four years ago after peaceful mass protests against the previous government, but Patarkatsishvili and other critics accuse him of ignoring laws and running roughshod over political foes.
The president's announcement late Thursday that he would call an early presidential election for January didn't mollify the businessman.
"Nobody should have any illusions that the authorities had heard the voice of the people," Patarkatsishvili said in a statement. "Mr. Saakashvili is once again deceiving the people, starting the campaign, while the state of emergency is in force, thus creating advantages for himself."
He predicted the government will seek to force opposition candidates out of the race, such as accusing them of links to Russia. He urged opposition factions to unite around a single challenger to the incumbent.
Patarkatsishvili, who once owned Georgia's most storied soccer team, was forced out as the longtime chairman of the country's Olympic committee last month.
In his resignation letter, he said, "My heartfelt and open position about a better tomorrow for Georgia increasingly differs from the position of those currently in power."
His ouster was preceded by an event that catalyzed the political opposition and riveted Georgians' attention allegations by former Defense Minister Irakli Okruashvili that Saakashvili was involved in corruption and a plot to murder Patarkatsishvili.
Saakashvili's supporters vehemently denied the allegations, and Okruashvili was shown on a video retracting his charges. The president accused opposition forces of organizing a "campaign of lies" against him in an attempt to weaken the Georgian state.
Georgian billionaire Badri Patarkatsishvili also wants to buy Maariv
By Ronny Koren-Dinar
Israeli paper Ha´aretz, 03.6.2007
Mere days before American billionaire Sheldon Adelson is expected to make an offer for Maariv, a surprise competitor has popped up: Badri Patarkatsishvili Tbilisi, a billionaire businessman from Georgia who now resides in England.
Patarkatsishvili was born in Tbilisi in 1955, and is reportedly the wealthiest man from Georgia. He has already begun negotiations with Maraiv publisher Ofer Nimrodi.
Sources close to the negotiations said that the deal values the paper at about $200 million, even though Maariv's company value on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange is only $130 million.
Adelson recently finished his due diligence examination of Maariv, and is expected to make a formal bid soon. If the Maariv deal falls through, Adelson is planning on starting his own free paper, Yisrael Hayom (Israel Today).
"As is known, there are negotiations with Adelson and we are waiting for his offer," Nimrodi commented. "At the same time, just recently, we have been approached by a number of competitors, among them Mr. Patarkatsishvili."
Patarkatsishvili, reportedly of Jewish ancestry, has maintained close business ties with another Russian businessman - Boris Berezovsky.