Zviad Gamsakhurdia became the first democratically elected president of Georgia in May 1991. Though his presidency came to an abrupt end in January 1992,
after an armed conflict erupted in Tbilisi, the capital city of Georgia. As a result of a 2 week long clashes between the government forces and the rebels, Gamsakhurdia was ousted and forced to leave the country, as Tengiz Kitovani and Tengiz Sigua, the main leaders of the rebel factions, invited the former
first secretary of the Georgian Communist Party, and the former
Soviet minister of foreign affairs,
Eduard Shevardnadze, to become the chairman of the Georgian parliament,
de facto ruling as the new president, As the impoverished former Soviet republic plunged into a brutal
civil war, Gamsakhurdia saw this as an opportunity to come back to power, returning to Georgia in September 1993 and beginning warfare in the
Samegrelo region. Gamsakhurdia and his supporters, the Zviadists, had noticeable success, capturing the capital city of the region,
Zugdidi, along with other towns such as
Khobi,
Senaki and
Samtredia, even going as far as reaching the outskirts of
Kutaisi, the second-largest city of the country, as they took advantage of the new government being unpopular in the rural areas of western Georgia, as well as the government forces being demoralized after the loss of the Abkhazia region. Though the Zviadists were soon stopped by them, with the help of the Russian military, as they entered Zugdidi without fighting on November 6, 1993.
Zviad Gamsakhurdia and his bodyguards escaped to the forests chased by the government forces. The ex-president died in late December under unclear circumstances. After his death, Zviadists never created a single party, but rather joined various political organizations or the military. One of such Zviadists was Akaki Eliava, the future leader of the mutiny, who was arrested after the war, but was later granted amnesty and joined the reconstructed
armed forces of Georgia, becoming a Colonel. Even though the new government restored peace in the country, the political and economical instability continued, as many factors, such as widespread corruption, would halt the recovery of the country from the effects of the civil war, as well as severely damage Shevardnadze's reputation, who survived an assassination attempt in August 1995, for which he blamed and imprisoned
Jaba Ioseliani, the leader of the paramilitary organisation
Mkhedrioni, which played a vital role in the civil war. Shevardnadze would later survive another assassination attempt in February 1998, which left two of his bodyguards and one of the attackers dead. Shevardnadze blamed Zviadists for the attack. == Timeline of events ==