Badri Bitsadze | |
---|---|
First Gentleman of Georgia Acting | |
In role 25 November 2007 – 20 January 2008 | |
President | Nino Burjanadze |
Preceded by | Sandra Roelofs |
Succeeded by | Sandra Roelofs |
In role 23 November 2003 – 25 January 2004 | |
President | Nino Burjanadze |
Preceded by | Nanuli Shevardnadze |
Succeeded by | Sandra Roelofs |
Chief of the Border Police of Georgia | |
In office July 2006 – 29 October 2008 | |
President | Mikheil Saakashvili Nino Burjanadze (acting) Mikheil Saakashvili |
Preceded by | position established |
Succeeded by | Zaza Gogava |
Personal details | |
Born | Chiatura, Georgian SSR, USSR | 27 April 1958
Spouse | Nino Burjanadze |
Alma mater | Tbilisi State University |
Badri Bitsadze (Georgian: ბადრი ბიწაძე) (born 27 April 1958) is the former Chief of the Border Police of Georgia.[1] He holds the rank of Lieutenant General,[1] and previously held the posts of Chief Military Prosecutor, Deputy General Prosecutor, and Deputy Minister of Internal Affairs.[2][3] He is married to the former Chairwoman of the Parliament of Georgia and twofold former interim President of Georgia, Nino Burjanadze.
Bitsadze attended Tbilisi State University, Faculty of Law, and received a Ph.D. from USSR Scientific Institute for Prosecutors. He's a recipient of the III Degree Vakhtang Gorgasali Order award.[1]
Bitsadze resigned his position on 29 October 2008, claiming that a campaign to discredit the agency was underway because his wife, the former parliamentary chairperson, had withdrawn into opposition to the current government.[4]
Later that year, Bitsadze became involved with his wife's newly founded party Democratic Movement–United Georgia. In March 2009, several party activists, including a driver of Badri Bitsadze, were arrested by the Georgian police on arms charges. Burjanadze said after the Interior Ministry's statement that she was ready to cooperate with the investigation, but claimed that evidence put forth by the investigation was not enough and needed further scrutiny.[5]