Loti Kobalia Explained

Loti Kobalia
Office:Defence Minister of Zviad Gamsakhurdia's rebel government
Term Start:September 1993
Term End:November 1993
Predecessor:Position Established
Successor:Badri Zarandia
Office1:Commander of Zugdidi battalion of National Guard of Georgia
Term Start1:1990
Term End1:1992
Birth Date:1950
Birth Place:Village Odishi, Zugdidi Raion, Georgian SSR, Soviet Union
(now Georgia)
Battles:Georgian Civil WarWar in Abkhazia (1992–93)
  • Battle of Tamishi
Party:Round Table—Free Georgia
Allegiance:Georgia
Branch:National Guard
Rank:Colonel

Vakhtang "Loti" Kobalia (Georgian: ვახტანგ [ლოთი] ქობალია) (born 1950) is a retired Georgian colonel involved in the civil war of the early 1990s in which he commanded forces loyal to the ousted President Zviad Gamsakhurdia.

Kobalia was a commander of the Zugdidi battalion of the National Guard of Georgia at the time when the armed opposition groups launched a coup against President Gamsakhurdia in December 1991. After Gamsakhurdia's fall in January 1992, Kobalia led resistance to the forces loyal to the new regime led, since March 1992, by Eduard Shevardnadze in the western Georgian province of Mingrelia, Gamsakhurdia's principal powerbase. During the War in Abkhazia in 1993, Kobalia's force joined the government troops in fighting the Abkhaz separatists and their allies from Russia at some point. As the government forces’ defeat in Abkhazia was imminent, Gamsakhurdia returned to Georgia to reclaim power from his base in Zugdidi. Kobalia began disarming the Georgian troops retreating from Abkhazia, blocked major roads in western Georgia and engaged with the government forces in a series of battles which eventually led to Gamsakhurdia's defeat at the end of 1993.[1]

Kobalia was arrested by the Ukrainian and Georgian security officers in Kyiv in July 1994. After a year-long trial, the Supreme Court of Georgia in 1996 found Kobalia guilty of treason, banditry, and execution of five captured soldiers and a TV journalist David Bolkvadze during the October 1993 hostilities, and sentenced him to death penalty, which was changed for 20-year imprisonment in 1997. Kobalia denied the charges and accused Shevardnadze's government of fabricating the case.[2] In October 2000 Kobalia and several inmates from the civil war period escaped from the Prison Hospital in Tbilisi, but were recaptured 10 days later in the mountains in the northwest of Georgia.[3] In 2004, he was pardoned by Georgia's newly sworn president Mikheil Saakashvili and released from jail as part of the National Accord policy, leading to protests from Bolkvadze's family and several journalists.[2] [4]

In October 2009, Kobalia joined the opposition party Movement for Fair Georgia, led by Georgia's ex-Prime Minister Zurab Noghaideli.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Wheatley, Jonathan (2005), Georgia from National Awakening to Rose Revolution, pp. 79, 84. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.,
  2. http://www.civil.ge/eng/article.php?id=6908&search=Kobalia Late President’s Ally Released
  3. http://www.eurasianet.org/resource/georgia/hypermail/200405/0024.shtml RFERL 5/11/04: Deceased Georgian President's Military Commander Released from Prison
  4. Михаил Саакашвили открывает тюрьмы (Mikheil Saakashvili Opens Prisons). Kommersant № 13 (2852). January 27, 2004
  5. http://www.rustavi2.com/news/news_text.php?id_news=33832&im=main&ct=25 Loti Kobalia re-emerges in politics