Georgian politicians fight live on TV
Published: 23 December, 2008, 17:02
In Georgia, a political TV debate on the crisis in the country descended first into a water fight and then fisticuffs.
breakingnews
29.10.2010, 17:54
3 comments
Twenty people have been detained in Georgia, suspected of spying for Russia, according to a Reuters report.
14.03.2010, 21:19
24 comments
One of Georgia's main TV channels has sparked panic and protests after broadcasting a fake news report that Russian troops were advancing towards the capital Tbilisi and President Saakashvili had been killed.
28.12.2009, 18:51
17 comments
Manana Archvadze-Gamsakhurdia, widow of the first Georgian president, says she cannot take the pressure any longer in her native country and has formally appealed to German Chancellor Angela Merkel for political asylum.
27.07.2010, 15:03
6 comments
Vera Kobalia, the new Minister of Economy and Sustained Development of Georgia made a scandalous start to her career once photos of her onstage a Canadian strip-club appeared in Facebook.
17.04.2009, 10:02
7 comments
Russia has criticised NATO's plans to hold exercises in Georgia next month, saying they could destabilize the sensitive region.
10.10.2009, 09:16
6 comments
An EU commission report may have pointed the finger at Georgia for causing the 2008 conflict in South Ossetia, but there is anger in Russia that some media in the West are not listening.
06.01.2010, 06:07
6 comments
Georgian public broadcasting has launched one of its most ambitious projects. The new TV channel claims to give an alternative perspective on world events. But many experts see it as an anti-Russian info campaign.
09.08.2009, 22:57
4 comments
Some of the biggest websites were affected Thursday by a cyber attack aimed at a single person who used them to criticize Russia’s policy toward Georgia. Russia was blamed immediately. But is the story that simple?
20.05.2010, 13:55
5 comments
Georgian president Mikhail Saakashvili has reportedly decided to improve his own security by installing an ejector seat in his private plane.
16.07.2010, 15:36
5 comments
President Lukashenko, having lost ground in Moscow, has now turned to the Kremlin’s foes and is enjoying warm relations with his former critic Georgian leader Saakashvili. What could be behind this sudden mutual love?
Published: 23 December, 2008, 17:02
In Georgia, a political TV debate on the crisis in the country descended first into a water fight and then fisticuffs.