Giorgi Mamaladze
was detained on Friday at Tbilisi airport as he boarded a plane to Berlin, where
the head of the Georgian Church, Patriarch Ilya II, was waiting for a gall
bladder operation.
Georgia's chief
prosecutor said Mamaladze was in possession of sodium cyanide. His statement
did not name the intended target, but the prime minister ordered increased
security for the Patriarch.
Mamaladze is
director general of the Georgian Patriarchate's St Joachim and Ana Medical
Centre, and also serves as deputy head of the Patriarchate's property
management service.
He has been
formally charged with attempted murder and has pleaded not guilty.
The Georgian
Orthodox Church counts around 80 per cent of the country's 4.5 million
population among its members and is notably conservative. It withdrew from the
Pan-Orthodox Council last year because it believed the preparatory documents
gave too much away to non-Orthodox Churches, later repudiating the Council and
its decisions.
Patriarch Ilia
has led the Church since 1977 and is credited with overseeing a major revival
after Georgian regained its independence after the collapse of the former
Soviet Union. He has suffered ill-health recently and had a successful gall
bladder operation today.
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