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Zviad Gamsakhurdia

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World Leader

The Resume

    (March 31, 1939-December 31, 1993)
    Born in Tbilisi, Georgia
    Co-founded Initiative Group for the Defense of Human Rights (1973)
    Senior Research Fellow of the Institute of Georgian Literature of the Georgian Academy of Sciences (1973–1977, 1985–1990)
    Associate Professor of the Tbilisi State University (1973–1975, 1985–1990)
    Member of Union of Georgia's Writers (1966–1977, 1985–1991)
    President of Georgia (April 14, 1991-January 6, 1992)
    Found dead in Khibula, Georgia
    Initially buried in Jikhashkari, Georgia, but was later reburied at Grozny, Chechnya, Russia (February 24, 1994) and finally at the Mtatsminda Pantheon in Tbilisi, Georgia (April 1, 2007)

Why he might be annoying:

    He changed from a human rights activist into a nationalistic dictator.
    His behavior became genuinely unpredictable as president.
    His slogan ‘Georgia for Georgians’ alienated Georgia’s ethnic minorities, eventually resulting in Abkhazia and South Ossetia breaking away from Georgia.
    Whenever something went wrong in Georgia, he always blamed Russia for causing it.
    He later tried to become president again through a civil war in Georgia.
    The cause of his death is disputed: some say he committed suicide while others say he was murdered.
    Some people initially refused to believe the news of his death until his body was exhumed from his grave (February 15, 1994).

Why he might not be annoying:

    His father was one of the most famous writers in Georgia during the 20th Century.
    He protested against the Soviet policy of Russification in Georgia, which resulted in repeated arrests (1956, 1958, 1977-1979).
    He was an early victim of the Soviet Union’s practice of incarcerating dissidents in mental hospitals.
    He was the first Georgian member of Amnesty International (1974).
    He translated the works of William Shakespeare, T.S. Eliot, Charles Baudelaire, and Oscar Wilde into Georgian.
    He was ousted in a coup d’état.
    He remains a popular figure among Georgians.

Credit: Big Lenny


Featured in the following Annoying Collections:

Year In Review:

    In 2023, Out of 1 Votes: 0% Annoying
    In 2022, Out of 2 Votes: 50.0% Annoying
    In 2021, Out of 10 Votes: 80.0% Annoying
    In 2020, Out of 7 Votes: 100% Annoying
    In 2019, Out of 30 Votes: 50.0% Annoying
    In 2018, Out of 25 Votes: 48.00% Annoying
    In 2017, Out of 12 Votes: 50.0% Annoying
    In 2016, Out of 1 Votes: 0% Annoying
    In 2015, Out of 11 Votes: 54.55% Annoying
    In 2014, Out of 28 Votes: 50.0% Annoying
    In 2013, Out of 36 Votes: 50.0% Annoying
    In 2012, Out of 14 Votes: 71.43% Annoying
    In 2011, Out of 14 Votes: 78.57% Annoying
    In 2010, Out of 65 Votes: 66.15% Annoying