George Bush failed offender in Georgian court

The trial of Vladimir Arutyunian, who faces life in prison for allegedly trying to assassinate U.S. President George W. Bush and Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili in May and for killing a policeman in a shootout before his arrest in July, opened in Tbilisi city court on Monday.

The two presidents were addressing a rally of thousands in Tbilisi from behind a bulletproof barrier when a grenade, wrapped in a cloth, landed about 30 meters away. It did not explode; investigators said it apparently malfunctioned. Previously it was reported to be dry. No one was hurt then.

Arutyunian acknowledged that he threw the grenade in the direction of the tribune and said that he would try again to kill Bush if he had the chance.

He has refused to testify before the court and demanded the presence of rights monitors.

"The verdict is preordained," he said Monday. "I demand that the international organization Human Rights Watch be present."

Arutyunian, 27, has been unemployed save for odd jobs since leaving school early. He lived with his mother Angela, who sells plastic bags at a Tbilisi market.

Investigators say they found explosives, toxic compounds and detective literature including Day of the Jackal, a book about an assassination attempt against French President Charles de Gaulle, in the basement of Arutyunian's residence. Arutyunian also had a Kalashnikov assault rifle, the AP reports.

Photo: the Itar-Tass news agency

V.Y.

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