Georgia’s imprisoned opposition leader and a former president Mikheil Saakashvili fainted in the prison on Thursday amid hunger strike. Saakashvili’s lawyers told Georgian press the ex-president was taken out on a stretcher by the medics when he lost consciousness.
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Saakashvili has been on a hunger strike for 49 days while protesting his incarceration. A council of medics set up by Georgia’s public defender says Saakashvili’s health is rapidly deteriorating. They recommend he be transferred from the prison hospital to a civilian clinic better equipped to treat him.
The Georgian government insisted that Saakashvili receives adequate medical care in the prison hospital and there is no need to transfer him to a civilian hospital. One of the doctors treating the former Georgian president says the president has been “stabilized” since losing consciousness and “is under continuous health monitoring” to ensure his well-being.
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U.S. State Department spokesperson Ned Price has previously urged Georgian government to “immediately take steps to ensure that Mr. Saakashvili’s urgent mental health and medical needs are addressed.”
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Saakashvili was convicted on corruption charges in absentia. He was arrested upon return to his home country of Georgia. He denies all charges and claims his conviction was politically motivated.