The superficiality of the investigation paves the way for international actors to act, - the third President of Georgia, Mikheil Saakashvili, wrote on social networks, responding to the results of the investigation conducted by the State Security Service regarding the investigative material prepared by the BBC.
As Mikheil Saakashvili noted, we are dealing with barbarians who do not care about trampling on people's rights, health and even life.
“As expected, the profanation of the investigation was completed as quickly as possible and everything has been justified. By this, in fact, Ivanishvili and his supporters took full responsibility for the crime against humanity.
Also, the superficiality of the investigation opens the door for international actors to act. In short, we are dealing with barbarians who do not care about trampling on the rights, health and lives of people in order to maintain their own usurped power.
Look at the pleasure with which this creature called the Minister of Health told how they poisoned, dispersed, and killed their fellow citizens. This is the highest level of dehumanization.
Well, their statements at least made it clear that during my presidency, the use of such substances was officially prohibited, then the Dream changed the MIA order N1002 and officially allowed the use of poisonous substances against civilians.
As for the doctors who are protecting the perpetrators, these are exactly the same people who make huge money in state programs, through corruption.
One of them examined me after I was poisoned and turned a blind eye to the symptoms that American and European doctors discovered in me a few months later. These doctors are also an integral part of evil and oppression and must be held accountable.
Regarding me, the Council of Europe's Committee for the Prevention of Torture concluded that the decisions were made not by doctors, but by state security agencies. I think the same applies to everyone else," Saakashvili wrote.
For information, according to the BBC, the evidence collected by them suggests that Georgia's authorities used a World War One-era chemical weapon to quell anti-government protesters last year. The BBC World Service spoke to chemical weapons experts, whistleblowers from Georgia's riot police, and doctors, and found the evidence points to the use of an agent that the French military named "camite".
According to the State Security Service, on the night of December 4-5, the substance "chlorobenzylidene malononitrile" was used to control the crowds, which was dissolved in a solution of "propylene glycol". According to them, none of them belong to the prohibited category – as for "camite", it has never been purchased by the Ministry of Internal Affairs.