The personal photographer of Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili and three other photojournalists were arrested on Thursday and accused of spying for a foreign country, according to Reuters. The arrests appeared to fall under what Georgia's powerful Interior Ministry says is an effort to root out Russian spy networks since the two countries fought a brief war in August 2008 over the breakaway region of South Ossetia. Presidential photographer Irakli Gedenidze, his photographer wife Natia, Zurab Kurtsikidze of the Frankfurt-based European Pressphoto Agency and freelancer Giorgi Abdaladze were arrested overnight, the Interior Ministry of the former Soviet republic said in a statement. It accused them of passing information obtained through their professional activities "to an organisation acting under cover of the special service of a foreign country, to the deteriment of the interests of Georgia." Relatives of those arrested told Reuters they were taken in the middle of the night by police who searched their homes and seized computers, equipment and mobile phones. Media watchdogs accuse the government under Saakashvili of manipulating the media and squeezing press freedoms since taking power after the 2003 Rose Revolution. Georgia ranks 100th out of 178 countries in the 2010 press freedom index compiled by media watchdog Reporters Without Borders. Several dozen journalists gathered on Thursday outside the police building where the arrested photojournalists were being held, clutching their pictures. Some held pictures comparing Saakashvili to Belarussian President Alexander Lukashenko, who has drawn international condemnation for cracking down on opponents with hundreds of arrests after his disputed re-election last December. Georgia's Western allies continue to be uneasy over restrictions on media freedom, the concentration of power in the office of the president and the use of the police to discredit political opponents. Dozens of Georgian citizens have been arrested in the three years since the war on charges of spying for Russia. Taped confessions and secretly recorded evidence have been broadcast on pro-government television channels well before their cases come to trial. Late on Wednesday, nine people, including three Russian citizens, were sentenced in the Georgian port town of Batumi to between 11 and 14 years in jail after they were convicted of working for the Russian intelligence services. Moscow has accused Saakashvili's government of anti-Russian hysteria.
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