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Moron who tried to fight Putin tried to suicide jump roof LOL! Video

Think_PAP

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Been a lame dog for the west. Useless now. Abandoned by the bankrupted beggars now. Better jump off the roof and die. LHL learned ?


https://www.rt.com/news/411954-saakashvili-jump-roof-police/


Why did Georgia’s ex-leader Saakashvili threaten to jump off roof in Kiev?
Published time: 5 Dec, 2017 07:35 Edited time: 5 Dec, 2017 09:55
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Mikheil Saakashvili is detained by officers of the Security Service of Ukraine, conducting a search of his apartment, in Kiev, Ukraine December 5, 2017. © Valentyn Ogirenko / Reuters
It has not been one of the best days in the turbulent career of Georgia’s former President Mikhail Saakashvili, renowned for chewing his tie on TV. Today he threatened to jump off a roof in Kiev as Ukrainian police searched his apartment, Ukrainian media say.
Law enforcement officials broke the door to Saakashvili’s apartment in central Kiev on Tuesday morning. Security forces searched the flat, while the former president of Georgia and ex-governor of Ukraine’s Odessa Region confined himself to the roof of the building.

He threatened to jump off the roof, LB.ua news portal reported, while emergency crews were seen arriving at the scene carrying a ladder.

They want to kidnap me because I’ve risen up to protect the Ukrainian people,” he told the crowds that gathered in the street. “They wanted to do it by stealth, but this did not work out.

Eventually, Saakashvili was taken away from the roof by security forces, NewsOne said.

Saakashvili is to be questioned on suspicions of assisting criminals and concealing their criminal activities, the Ukrainian Security Service (SBU) said in a statement. The offense can punished with up to five years behind bars.

The car transporting the detained politician was reportedly blocked on the way to the detention facility, local media reported. Saakashvili’s supporters continue to block the streets near his house in the center of Kiev. One man was reportedly injured in scuffles with police.

Сторонники Саакашвили пытались отбить его у спецназа СБУ – видео: https://t.co/OVAlTmPQevpic.twitter.com/67AXlw8Uh3

— Life | Новости (@lifenews_ru) December 5, 2017
Сторонник задержанного Саакашвили облил себя бензином и попытался поджечь: https://t.co/vgTMKAiqBOpic.twitter.com/IsFtmBcEQu

— Life | Новости (@lifenews_ru) December 5, 2017
In 2015, Saakashvili gave up his Georgian citizenship as he accepted an offer to become the governor of Odessa Region at the personal behest of President Petro Poroshenko. But this did not last long with Saakashvili resigning in November 2016 and Poroshenko personally annulling the politician’s new passport.

READ MORE: Ukraine police open criminal case after former Georgian leader Saakashvili breaks through border

Since then the former president of Georgia organized anti-government rallies in Ukraine which demanded Poroshenko impeached.

His native Georgia is also demanding his extradition on charges of corruption.

The awkward moment when the then-Georgian leader chewed his tie before an interview with the BBC on the last day of the war in South Ossetia in August, 2008.


via GIPHY
 
Putin should had killed him during Georgian Wars.




https://www.rt.com/news/412000-saakashvili-police-kiev-protesters/

Chaotic scenes as Saakashvili dragged into police van in Kiev (VIDEO)
Published time: 5 Dec, 2017 14:40
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© Ruptly
Video has emerged showing ex-president of Georgia-turned-Ukrainian opposition leader Mikhail Saakashvili being forcefully dragged into a police van. Protesters clashed with police in an attempt to prevent the detention, eventually setting Saakashvili free.
“Complete lawlessness! People, resist!” Saakashvili, who was stripped of his Ukrainian citizenship earlier this year, is heard screaming while being forcefully taken away by several masked Ukrainian security forces (SBU) officers, who are then seen struggling to tuck the politician into a police van.

The video shows crowds of Saakashvili supporters clashing violently with Ukrainian riot police in an effort to prevent the authorities from taking the former governor of the Odessa Region away. Hundreds are seen blocking the street to prevent the police van from moving off.

Protesters eventually succeeded in setting the now-stateless Saakashvili free from the van by breaking the rear door of the van. He immediately called on the protesters to take to the infamous Maidan Square and topple the Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko and his “gang.”

READ MORE: Saakashvili freed by supporters from police van in Kiev, calls to oust President Poroshenko

Saakashvili, 49, reportedly threatened to jump off a roof in Kiev after Ukrainian police broke the door to his apartment on Tuesday morning. Quick on his feet, he fled to the roof of the building to give an ardent speech to supporters gathered below.

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https://www.rt.com/news/411974-saakashvili-supporters-protest-kiev/




Saakashvili freed by supporters from police van in Kiev, calls to oust President Poroshenko
Published time: 5 Dec, 2017 10:48 Edited time: 5 Dec, 2017 16:57
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Mikheil Saakashvili flashes a victory sign after he was freed by his supporters in Kiev, Ukraine December 5, 2017. © Gleb Garanich / Reuters
The ex-president of Georgia turned Ukrainian opposition leader has called on his supporters to topple the current Ukrainian leader and his “gang.” Earlier, protesters freed Saakashvili, who currently has no valid citizenship, from the police van taking him in for questioning.
Saakashvili’s supporters broke the rear door of the van he was being transported in. The protesters took Saakashvili to a nearby church, where he addressed the crowd. The opposition leader called on the protesters to take to the infamous Maidan Square and topple incumbent Ukrainian leader Petro Poroshenko and his “gang.”

READ MORE: Why did Georgia’s ex-leader Saakashvili threaten to jump off roof in Kiev?

“I will lay down my life for Ukraine’s freedom. I want to call on all the Kievans to take to the streets today, to gather in Maidan and start the process of deliverance of Petro Poroshenko and his gang from Ukraine,” Saakashvili said addressing the crowd.

As the politician finished his anti-government speech, the protesters started marching through the streets of the Ukrainian capital.

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Police officers use tear gas against supporters of Georgian former President Mikheil Saakashvili during clashes in Kiev, Ukraine December 5, 2017. © Gleb Garanich / Reuters
After the march, crowds gathered in front of the Ukrainian parliament building, where Saakashvili spoke in front of his supporters. The leader of Ukrainian opposition party ‘Movement of New Forces’ reiterated the call to impeach the Ukrainian president and take to the streets “to continue peaceful protest.” He also said that the evening rally should gather more people than before, claiming that there were 50,000 at the previous demonstration. In recent months, the opposition leader has been organizing protests in the country, targeting mainly his former friend and ally Petro Poroshenko.

Сторонники Саакашвили разбирают брусчатку и блокируют машину с задержанным - https://t.co/Y19ujyhwO8pic.twitter.com/z2bnWsDLaj

— SIght REAL (@real_sight) December 5, 2017
The standoff between the protesters and Ukrainian security forces lasted for several hours, leaving several people injured, before Saakashvili’s forced release. On Tuesday morning, the former Georgian president went on the roof of his apartment building in Kiev and threatened to jump off, while security forces searched his apartment. After the opposition activist was detained, supporters started blocking the nearby streets with tires, stones, bins, and cars to prevent police from taking Saakashvili to a detention facility.

READ MORE: ‘Cut off tentacles & go after the big head’: Saakashvili calls for power grab in Kiev

The police van became stuck in the crowd, and protests smashed the front window. Ukrainian security forces used tear gas and deployed more officers to the site in attempt to clear the way. The protesters tried to break the police cordon and used what appears to be pepper spray against the officers.

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Georgian former President Mikheil Saakashvili struggles out of a police car in Kiev, Ukraine December 5, 2017. © Oleh Tereshchenko / Reuters
Ukraine’s Prosecutor General, Yury Lutsenko, announced that Saakashvili has 24 hours to appear before an investigator and then in court. Otherwise, “Ukraine’s entire law enforcement system” will do anything to detain the stateless politician, Lutsenko said, speaking at the parliament on Tuesday.

Lutsenko stated that Kiev would “try to avoid” any violence, and that Saakashvili’s submission “would spare the country of needless convulsions.” He also accused Saakashvili of involvement in “financial fraud including with oligarchs from Moscow,” and claimed that the politician’s supporters now protesting in Kiev “perform Moscow’s script.”

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Kiev, Ukraine December 5, 2017. © Gleb Garanich / Reuters
Ukrainian security forces want to question the out-of-favor politician on suspicion of assisting criminals and concealing their criminal activities.

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© Valentyn Ogirenko / Reuters
Saakashvili was the president of Georgia from 2004 to 2013, before leaving his native country while facing a number of criminal charges, including abuse of power. In 2015, he gave up Georgian citizenship and accepted an offer to become a governor in Ukraine; however, his new Ukrainian citizenship has also been removed, with authorities citing false information in his application. Earlier this year, Saakashvili illegally crossed into Ukraine.

The politician was once a close ally of current Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, who granted him citizenship and appointed him as governor of Odessa Region. The friendship did not last long, however, with Saakashvili resigning in November 2016 to create his own political party called ‘Movement of New Forces.’ The governor turned opposition leader accuses the Ukrainian authorities, and Poroshenko in particular, of corruption and “robbing” the country.

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Kiev, Ukraine December 5, 2017. © Gleb Garanich / Reuters
Poroshenko personally stripped him of his new citizenship. Since then, the former president of Georgia has organized anti-government rallies in Ukraine, calling for the impeachment of the Ukrainian leader. His native Georgia is also demanding his extradition on charges of corruption. Kiev has refused to comply with the request, according to the Ukrainian Prosecutor General.

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Kiev, Ukraine December 5, 2017. © Gleb Garanich
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