Georgian Would-Be Assassin Details Grenade Attack on Bush

Published: 27 July 2005 y., Wednesday

Vladimir Arutyunyan, accused of throwing a grenade at U.S. President George Bush, has described his assassination attempt.

During a conversation with the head of the Georgian police press center, Guram Donadze, who was quoted by Izvestia newspaper, Arutyunyan apparently said: “I will tell you why I did it. Because Bush is a prick!”

Arutyunyan, who is being held in custody before his trial, said he threw the grenade over his head “like a lob in basketball so that pieces would fly over the armored glass.”

The grenade attack took place on May 10 during Bush’s speech in the center of the Georgian capital of Tbilisi. The grenade hit a girl’s head and did not go off. Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili, who was also on the podium when Bush spoke, raised the prospect that the grenade could have been directed at him.

Georgian police have revealed that the grenade did not explode because it was “wrapped up too tight in a red handkerchief,” not due to a defective fuse as it was reported earlier, the paper quoted the country’s interior minister, Vano Merabishvili, as saying.

Arutyunyan was detained after a shootout with Georgian police. He killed a police colonel and was wounded himself. His arrest came three days after his photograph was published in Georgian media. The photographs were made by a Polish press photographer who had been taking shots of a pretty woman standing next to the suspected bomber.

Soon after his detention, Arutyunyan pleaded guilty and said he was ready to commit another terrorist attack against Bush and Saakashvili.
So far, he is charged with attempted murder, illegal arms storage, armed resistance during detention, and premeditated murder with aggravating circumstances. Arutyunyan may face life imprisonment.

Several Georgian politicians saw the hand of Russia in the attack. Head of the parliamentary defense and security committee Givi Targamadze said Arutyunyan was connected with “Russia’s or some other states’” secret services. However, he did not provide any evidence to back up his theory.

Šaltinis: MosNews, bakutoday.net
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Florida school meeting turns violent

A gunman opens fire at a Florida school board meeting, then kills himself. more »

Customs: New security rules enter fully into force on 1 January 2011

From 1 January 2011, traders will have to make an electronic declaration to Customs with security data on goods before they leave or enter the European Union. more »

Children released after nursery siege

A youth armed with two swords is arrested after holding several children hostage at a nursery school in eastern France. more »

Police say Sweden blasts are terror crimes

Swedish authorities say Saturday's two explosions in Stockholm were terror crimes, while local media reports one blast was caused by a suicide bomber. more »

Investigation of Russia crash begins

Investigators have begun examining the wreckage of the crash that injured 90 and killed 2 people after takeoff near Moscow. more »

Blaze rips through Shanghai tower

Fire tears through a Shanghai high-rise apartment building, killing at least 8 people and injuring scores. more »

Child pornography: MEPs doubt effectiveness of blocking web access

Blocking access to web sites containing child pornography may not be entirely effective, and could be hard to do EU-wide, due to EU Member States' differing sensitivities and traditions, said Civil Liberties Committee MEPs on Monday, in a preliminary debate on a proposed EU directive on sexual abuse of children and child pornography. more »

The vote on legalized marijuana

Californians are casting ballots on a proposition to legalize limited use of marijuana. more »

Mexico's biggest-ever drug bust

Heavily armed soliders raid houses in Tijuana confiscating 134 tonnes of marijuana valued at 340 million dollars. more »

Dramatic calls in London 7/7 inquest

An inquest into the London 7/7 bombings hears how emergency services struggled to cope with the chaos sparked by the bomb attacks. more »