Journalist's murder political says Georgian President

Georgian President Mr Eduard Shevardnadze said today that the murder of a popular television journalist may have been aimed at…

Georgian President Mr Eduard Shevardnadze said today that the murder of a popular television journalist may have been aimed at sowing instability in the country.

Mr Georgi Sanaya (26) one of the former Soviet republic's best-known journalists, was found shot dead in his home last Thursday.

"We should not rule out that we are dealing with a well-planned provocation aimed at creating instability, chaos and alienation between authorities and the Georgian public," Mr Shevardnadze said in his weekly radio address.

Mr Sanaya's death sparked a rally by hundreds of protesters who condemned his death as an attack on free press and called on the government to resign.

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The president said investigating the murder was an important priority for Georgia as a young nation building a democracy.

"The responsibility [for the investigation] lies with all of us. I have said many times, we have not completed the construction of a really strong state, able to protect its citizens, especially well-known ones," he said.

Mr Sanaya was a newsreader and political chat show host on the independent Rustavi-2 television station. Police said he was shot with a single bullet to the head.

Georgian journalists said the murder was aimed at silencing free-thinking reporters.

The killers of Mr Georgi Sanaya shot not only at him but at each one of us, said a statement signed by dozens of Georgian journalists.

The authorities bear the responsibility and it would only be logical for the government to resign.

The United States has offered a team from the FBI to help police investigate.

Reuters