News about Bidzina Ivanishvili

Violence breaks out outside AND inside parliament as Georgia APPROVES 'Russian law' bill that has plunged the country into crisis and pushed it closer to Putin

www.dailymail.co.uk, May 14, 2024
Mass protests against the law have swept the South Caucasus nation of 3.7 million in recent weeks, with the latest violent clash between demonstrators and police happening outside the parliament in Tbilisi today. Footage shows demonstrators attempting to break through the barriers outside the government building as hundreds of police officers storm out and roughly drag people wrapped in Georgian flags away from the barriers. A violent brawl also erupted inside the parliament as lawmakers were debating the bill earlier today before it was approved. Georgian Dream MP Dimitry Samkharadze was seen charging toward Levan Khabeishvili, the chairman of main opposition party United National Movement, after Khabeishvili accused him of organising mobs to beat up opposition supporters.

Last stand for democracy as 1,000 protesters demonstrate against Georgia's 'Russian law' that copies Kremlin's repressive legislation and moves the country closer to Putin

www.dailymail.co.uk, May 13, 2024
The ex-Soviet republic has been gripped for weeks by huge protests over the bill, dubbed the 'Russian law' as it resembles repressive legislation used by the Kremlin. Protesters - largely young people - are furious over the bill, saying it will sabotage the Caucasus country's hopes of joining the EU and will end democracy in the country. The ruling Georgian Dream party - which was forced to drop a similar bill last year after a huge backlash - are intent on passing the bill Tuesday, arguing it is all about transparency. The law requires NGOs and media receiving more than 20 percent of their funding from abroad to register as an 'organisation pursuing the interests of a foreign power'. MPs on Monday pushed the bill through a parliamentary legal committee in minutes. Tens of thousands protested against the bill Sunday, with some staying all night to stop ruling party MPs from entering the parliament building Monday.

Bloodied and battered for standing up to Georgia's new 'Putin-inspired' law: Opposition leader shows injuries inflicted 'by police' as cops use stun grenades to break up huge protests

www.dailymail.co.uk, May 1, 2024
Riot police in Georgia have allegedly beaten up the leader of Georgia's main opposition party after he stood up to the country's new 'Putin-inspired' law as cops used tear gas and stun grenades to break up huge protests outside parliament. Levan Khabeishvili, who heads the United National Movement Party, which is pro-NATO and pro-European Union, shared a photo of himself after he had sustained horrific injuries after a night of fighting between protesters and police in Tbilisi. The politician could be seen with a swollen black eye, a bloodied and broken nose, and a missing tooth after claiming he had been kidnapped and attacked for opposing the ruling party's 'foreign influence' law. Khabeishvili later appeared in the Georgian parliament with his face wrapped in bandages as he opposed the legislation, which has been dubbed by critics as 'Kremlin-inspired'. 'If someone thinks we won't smile because we lose a tooth or can't open our eyes, they are very mistaken. We will smile because Georgia will win,' the politician told the chamber after being brought in in a wheelchair.

'If the West wants to confiscate his father's assets, the Albino wannabe rapper and global influencer who is the heir to his 'Pro-Putin' Georgian father's multi-billion dollar fortune has been sent to Brazil to establish a base.'

www.dailymail.co.uk, April 1, 2024
Bera Ivanishvi, an albino wannabe rapper and global influencer who is the successor to his oligarch father's multi-billion-pound fortune and a key figure in his country's forthcoming elections. Bera Ivanishvil, instead of being in Georgia campaigning for his Dad's political party to maintain his iron grip control, is living a playboy lifestyle in...Brazil. And now MailOnline can reveal that security experts have been sent to establish a base in South America in the event that any Western countries decide to seize his father's vast wealth. Bera, the rapper and pseudo influencer who is so popular in his home country that he is referred to as Bera, is the 29-year-old firstborn son of billionaire Bidzina Ivanishvili, who is believed to be the true king of the former Soviet republic bordering the Black Sea.

EXCLUSIVE: Inside Georgia's World Cup camp: With patriotic fervour and bulging biceps, the Lelos stars are ready to raise a few eyebrows in France as they eye up a seat at the Six Nations table

www.dailymail.co.uk, September 6, 2023
BY ALEX BYWATER: Beka Saghinadze impulsively decides to climb the stairs to add a few pounds as he sees colleague Luka Japaridze dragging 250 kilos across the gym floor. The aim is to make his coworker's physical challenge even more difficult. The new weight of the sled has surpassed the mammoth 400 kg mark thanks to Saghinadze's new position and some additional metal plates. That would be about six people on average. When strangely wielding a long, black baton, a gruesome glance crosses Saghinadze's face, the Urgent prop Japaridze's legs will accelerate and push even harder. Welcome to Georgian rugby's wild, mysterious world, where beards and tattoos are commonplace, patriotic fervour, and bulging biceps are an unquestionable requirement.

Credit Suisse's controversies: the missteps, losses, and turbulence of recent years have fueled the missteps, miscalculations, and hysteria

www.dailymail.co.uk, March 16, 2023
A string of scandals, repeated shuffles in top management, multi-billion dollar losses, and strategic mistakes may all be contributing to the difficulties that the 167-year-old Swiss lender now faces. Credit Suisse's shares fell 11% in March 2021, triggered by a $10 billion impairment in the death of UK's Greensill Capital, as well as a $5.5 billion loss as a result of US investment fund Archegos' demise years earlier. Credit Suisse's 2021 guilty plea in the so-called 'tuna bond scam' also included a criminal conviction in Switzerland last year for failing to avoid money laundering by a Bulgarian cocaine trafficking firm.