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Mikheil Saakashvili became the democratically elected President of Georgia on 25 January 2004.

President Saakashvili was born in Tbilisi, Georgia on 21 December 1967, and is eldest son of three brothers. His mother, Professor Giuli Alasania, is an expert in Georgia's long history of peaceful multi-cultural and religious tolerance and she is still active in education and democracy-building efforts.
 
 


His father, Dr. Nikoloz Saakashvili, still practices medicine in Tbilisi and is director of The Balneological Center, a physical therapy and hydro-therapy center.

In 1984, Mikheil Saakashvili graduated with honors from Tbilisi Secondary School N51 and was accepted into the prestigious Kiev University Institute of International Relations. He graduated with honors. The close friendships formed in his three years in Kiev continue to this day.

President Saakashvili studied in the United States for years. He attended Columbia University in New York City as an Edmund S. Muskie Fellow and received a Master's Degree in Law in 1995. From 1995 to 1996, he studied law at the doctoral level at The George Washington University National Center of Law in Washington, D.C.

He was awarded a diploma in Comparative Law of Human Rights at the Strasbourg Human Rights International Institute. He then spent more than half of 1992 specializing in minority issues at the Norwegian Institute of Human Rights and organized a conference between Georgians and South Ossetians that led to the first signed ceasefire agreement.

At the Human Rights Committee of Georgia, 1992-93, he secured prisoner exchange agreements between Georgians and Abkhazs and also between Armenians and Azeris captured in the fighting for Nagorno-Karabakh. Admitted to the New York Bar, he practiced commercial law for nearly a year at Patterson, Belknap, Webb and Tyler in New York City.

Coming home to Georgia, he was elected to Parliament in 1995 and was immediately elected by his peers in Parliament as Chair of the Parliamentary Committee on Constitutional, Legal Issues and Legal Affairs.

He poured new energy into the committee's mission. He immediately launched legislation to fight corruption and to institutionalize human rights. Many reforms written by his committee passed Parliament, particularly in areas of constitutional law, Georgia's civil and administrative codes, and the Unified Law of Courts setting judicial standards and practices.

He soared to national prominence though his leadership in Parliament fighting for Judicial reform. He fought for transformation of Georgian courts from Soviet-modeled ineffectiveness to a more transparent and accountable model. He initiated Georgia's first merit-based selection of judges so that all judicial candidates sat through an objective examination under direct supervision of representatives of the American Bar Association.

He was the first Minister of Justice to tackle prison reform, fighting to improve conditions to standards of international human rights. He regularly visited Georgian prisons and worked in the prisons himself on those improvements.

In August 1998, he became majority leader of Parliament when his party, "Citizen's Union", elected him leader of their parliamentary delegation. He was re-elected to Parliament in 1999 but this time elected directly by the constituents of the Vake district in central Tbilisi.

The Georgian Parliament elected him head of Georgia's delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe. In January 2000 in Strasbourg, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe elected Mikheil Saakashvili of Georgia as its Vice President.

On October 12, 2000, then-President Edward Shevardnadze appointed Mikheil Saakashvili to be Minister of Justice of Georgia. Seven out of eight parties in a deeply divided parliament voted in favor of his appointment.

He quickly became a popular minister who resonated with the Georgian people. He used public transportation and walked to work through Tbilisi's streets, while other ministers rode in cars with dark windows. He became known for frequently stopping on the streets to hear the complaints from average citizens and then for arranging solutions while other officials had no such contact at all.

At the Justice Ministry, Mikheil Saakashvili made it the priority to attack the culture of corruption that pervaded post-Soviet Georgia. He was fearless about starting with the highest levels, and launched tough investigations that quickly produced hard evidence of personal corruption by senior officials.

But, even when faced with the evidence, the government repeatedly refused to prosecute. In one storied moment, Minister Saakashvili brought incriminating photos to a televised meeting of the government, photos that were proof of corruption among his ministers who were at the table. When leaders including President Shevardnadze ignored the evidence, Minister Saakashvili went public and began to release the evidence. Despite threats of reprisal and personal danger, he relentlessly exposed the wrong-doing.

It was also during this period, in the summer of 2001, that journalist Giorgi Sanaya, an outspoken critic of the government, was found shot to death in his Tbilisi apartment. Fifty thousand Georgians marched on the Presidency demanding answers for Sanaya's death, the first large demonstration by Georgians against their government since 1989.

In September 2001, less than a year after his appointment, Mikheil Saakashvili resigned as Minister of Justice over the government's unwillingness to end corruption within itself. He also resigned from his "Citizens' Union Party", also the party of President Edward Shevardnadze.

Only weeks after that resignation and now running as an independent, he was overwhelmingly re-elected to Parliament in October 2001 by the constituents of Tbilisi's Vake District.

Before the end of 2001, he formed a new party, "The United National Movement", pledging to take the fight to the government over corruption. Political contemporaries and citizens flocked to sign up. It was also during this time that the government attempted to shut down independent television station, Rustavi 2, but thousands of Georgians surrounded the station to protect it and the attempt failed.

Mikheil Saakashvili resigned his seat in Parliament to be eligible to run locally for Tbilisi City Council (Sakrebulo). He won on the platform, "Tbilisi without Shevardnadze" and was elected Council Chair.

As Council Chair, 2002-2003, he put new energy into the neglected city and jumpstarted programs to create real city services. Pensions were increased, streets were paved, playgrounds were built and corrupt city officials found out: The party was over. He ended the widespread practice of illegal construction that fed itself on payoffs to corrupt city officials.

He established the "Heroes Memorial" on Heroes Square in Tbilisi to honor all those who died protecting the territorial integrity of Georgia. He also created the first memorial in the country honoring the 18 Georgians who died on the steps of Parliament, bludgeoned to death with shovels by uniformed Soviet troops on 9 April 1989 during what had been a peaceful demonstration for Georgian independence from the Soviet Union.

He became a candidate again for Parliament for the new "National Movement" party in what would become the historic Georgian national elections scheduled for November 2003. He ran on the platform, "Georgia without Shevardnadze" .

When the government released election results placing President Shevardnadze's coalition, named "For New Georgia", first in the vote with Saakashvili's "National Movement" at number two, there was instant public outrage. Every international observer and scientific pollster had documented that "For New Georgia" went into the election with single digit public support and could not have come out with the numbers it claimed.

Mikheil Saakashvili and the late Zurab Zhvania, a member of Parliament from the "United Democrats" party, united to reject the election results and called on the public to protest and to protest in public. Thus began the Rose Revolution.

Saakashvili was determined that the protests would be determinedly non-violent, lawful and constitutional. With Zhvania and the Speaker of Parliament, Nino Burjanadze, they strategized to plan peaceful demonstrations by the Georgians pouring into the streets.

For 19 days and nights, with the crowds growing larger every day, Saakashvili led the public rejection of the contrived election results. Whether roaring in unison under windows where ministers retreated in offices, or honking countless car horns in earsplitting din at coordinated signals, the protests grew louder, larger and more intense. Mikheil Saakashvili left Tbilisi to tour the regions of Georgia and lead countless thousands more Georgians back into Tbilisi to join the throngs. Through those weeks, non-violence was the leadership's method and means and the people of Georgia were faithful to it.

Critical mass occurred on 22 November 2003 when President Shevardnadze and his allies gathered for the opening of Parliament for a session that would certify the fraudulent election results. At first there was no quorum as parliamentarians boycotted the session. Even the Patriarch of the Georgian Orthodox Church, Ilia II, declined to attend the session to deliver his traditional blessing on opening day.

The session of Parliament had to be stopped to prevent constitutionally legitimate approval of the illegal election reports. Trying to bring the government to a halt, Mikheil Saakashvili and followers peacefully entered and occupied government offices of the Chancellery. That's where they were when they received word that Parliament had achieved a quorum: Parliamentarians of the "New Right" party reversed their earlier decision to boycott and had entered the Parliament to join President Shevardnadze and his allies.

It was Mikheil Saakashvili who made the historic decision that the protestors should enter the Parliament itself to stop the session. He led a selected group, including Zhvania and Burjanadze, through the throngs to the doors of the Parliament. He lifted his hands to show he was unarmed. In one hand, he held a red rose.

He pushed into the building, but was forcefully ejected and the furious crowds pushed their way at the building, lifting their roses. However, what could have turned violent, did not. The Georgian guards surrounding Parliament had become familiar with the protestors over the weeks, chatting with their fellow Georgians for days and nights; the protestors had even fed the young guards when the government had made no such provision. At the moment the crowds began to surge, the guards first resisted, but then, they began to disobey their shouting superiors. The young Georgian security guards stepped aside and led by Saakashvili, the people of Georgia entered their Parliament.

Most members of Parliament fled, fearing the crowd. President Shevardnadze was whisked out the back, physically carried aloft by his guards. Upon his desertion of the Parliamentary session, Speaker Burjanadze was declared acting President.

Mikheil Saakashvili and his fellow leaders went to the President's residence. After long hours of negotiations deep into the night, President Shevardnadze resigned in the early hours of 23 November 2003.

In the special elections held on 4 January 2004 that were watched by the entire world, the people of Georgia overwhelmingly elected Mikheil Saakashvili as their President.

President Saakashvili lives in a 3-room apartment in a private residential building in Tbilisi with his wife, Sandra, and their two sons.

 

 

Sandra E. Roelofs
was born on December 23 1968 in Terneuzen,
the Netherlands.

In 1991 she graduated with honors from the State Economic Institute for Translators and Interpreters, Brussels, majoring in French and German. She met Mikheil Saakashvili in 1993 while attending a course on human rights in Strasbourg and later that year moved to New York where she worked at Columbia University and a Dutch law firm.

 

In 1996 the couple returned to Georgia, where Sandra E. Roelofs worked for the International Committee of the Red Cross and the Consulate of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. She has also been a correspondent for Dutch radio covering Georgian politics and socio-economic topics since 1997.

In 1998 the first lady founded the SOCO Foundation (www.soco.ge) a charitable non-governmental organization which conducts humanitarian projects for the most vulnerable groups sponsored by both Western-European and Georgian companies and individuals. The SOCO Foundation as of 2007 is mainly focusing on reproductive health and care for newborns.
From 1999 to 2003 Ms Roelofs was a free-lance business consultant for mainly Dutch companies interested in business opportunities in Georgia. At the same time she was coordinator for a management know-how transfer program funded by the Netherlands government and she was a visiting lecturer of French language at Tbilisi State University. From Fall 2003 she switched to the Caucasus School of Business, a private educational institution where she has been teaching French to students till summer 2007. Besides her native tongue Ms. Roelofs is proficient in French, English, German, Russian and Georgian, learning a regional language in Georgia: Mingrelian.

In March 2005 the First Lady of Georgia published her autobiography “Sandra Elisabeth Roelofs – the Story of an Idealist” in Amsterdam, in Dutch language. A translation in Georgian and in Ukrainian followed in October 2005 and March 2006 respectively. The book describes her first trip to Georgia in Summer 1992, her meeting with Mikheil Saakashvili, their life in the United States, her integration in Georgian society, the couple’s career development and the gradually growing unrest in Georgia leading to the peaceful Rose Revolution of Fall 2003.

The First Lady of Georgia takes pride in working on a daily basis on the United Nations Millennium Development Goals with a special focus on reduction of maternal and child mortality, extreme poverty and infectious diseases. Since October 2004 Ms Roelofs is the chairperson of the Country Coordinating Mechanism for projects of the Global Fund to fight AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria in Georgia. Recently she was appointed Stop TB Partnership Ambassador.
She is also chairing the Reproductive Health National Council under the Georgian Ministry of Health and Social Affairs. She supports this Ministry in issues like the promotion of immunization and healthy life style (including fight against drug abuse).

At present Ms Roelofs is a student at Nursing School in Tbilisi and hopes to get her diploma mid 2008.

She has set up the first classical music radio station in Georgia with Dutch expertise.

Ms Roelofs is fond of swimming, tennis, skiing and classical music.

SOCO Foundation

Since February, 2007 priority of SOCO Foundation has become reproductive health and care for newborns:

  • Material assistance (renovation, medical equipment, disposables) to the delivery homes;
  • Multi-children families support;
  • Information to pregnant women and general public on reproductive health;
  • Promotion of Healthy Lifestyle and early prevention of oncological diseases of the reproductive system;
  • Education and training of medical personnel in reproductive health (radiologists, neonatologists, midwives);
  • Supporting the mobile team of UNFPA (medical staff, material assistance).

Ongoing projects:

  • Multi-children families support with food packages – Adjara, Chiatura, Tbilisi;
  • Free medical consultation of women in Kvemo Kartli region by the physicians mobile group;
  • Start packages for pregnant women in Kvemo Kartli region;
  • Healthy Marriage – free medical consultation and treatment along with the incentives for the newly-wed couples in Adjara;
  • On-site training of radiologists in Samegrelo and Kvemo Kartli;
  • Equipment support of prenatal diagnostics at the Gudushauri clinic in Tbilisi;
  • Financial support of transportation and amniocentesis procedure for risk group pregnant women from the regions;
  • Material assistance to Makhindjauri Orphanage;
  • Material assistance to Borjomi Maternity House.