. . . . "585040"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Londer Tsaava"@en . . . . . "760898509"^^ . . . . . "Londer Tsaava (Georgian: \u10DA\u10DD\u10DC\u10D3\u10D4\u10E0 \u10EA\u10D0\u10D0\u10D5\u10D0) was the chairman of the Cabinet of Ministers in Exile, which forms part of the Georgian government-in-exile now based in Kodori, Georgia. In this capacity, he served as the government-in-exile's second highest-ranking official, and also had a period as de facto leader. He has been a strong advocate of Abkhazian reunification with Georgia. In this capacity, he presented a petition of 200,000 signatures to the United Nations Security Council from Georgians demanding the withdrawal of the current peacekeeping force."@en . . "Londer Tsaava (Georgian: \u10DA\u10DD\u10DC\u10D3\u10D4\u10E0 \u10EA\u10D0\u10D0\u10D5\u10D0) was the chairman of the Cabinet of Ministers in Exile, which forms part of the Georgian government-in-exile now based in Kodori, Georgia. In this capacity, he served as the government-in-exile's second highest-ranking official, and also had a period as de facto leader. He has been a strong advocate of Abkhazian reunification with Georgia. In this capacity, he presented a petition of 200,000 signatures to the United Nations Security Council from Georgians demanding the withdrawal of the current peacekeeping force. In late 2003, a group of Georgian veterans of the war with Abkhazia began a hunger strike in Tbilisi, demanding the resignation of both Tamaz Nadareishvili, leader of the government-in-exile, and Tsaava. Though Nadareishvili was forced to resign, Tsaava managed to retain his position. Around the same time, Tsaava was involved in negotiations with a group of Georgian refugees from Abkhazia that had taken hostages. He was eventually successful in securing their release, which may have been a factor in his survival as chairman. He was eventually replaced by Irakli Alasania."@en . . "1723"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . .