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On 20 December 1990 he made a point of resigning as foreign minister in protest against what he viewed as the onset of a dictatorship in the USSR reactionary forces, particularly within the military, had regained the ascendancy. Following the abortive anti-Gorbachev coup in August 1991 (in which he stood alongside Boris Yeltsin) and the dissolution of the CPSU, his Democratic Reform Party stood out as a key force in the new politics of Russia and the USSR. Shevardnadze turned down an offer from President Gorbachev to join the post-coup security council, but subsequently agreed to join Gorbachev's advisory council. In March 1992, following the ousting of President Zviad Gamsakhurdia, he was chosen as chair of Georgia's ruling State Council, and in the first parliamentary elections in October was elected speaker of parliament, with 90% of the vote.
Shevardnadze inherited a nation affected by a continuing civil war and secessionist movement in Abkhazia. Reluctantly, he turned to Russia for military aid to crush the insurgencies and attempted to disband private militias. He was directly elected executive president in November 1995.
Blue stands for the Pacific Ocean. The yellow stripe represents the Equator. The points of the star symbolize the island's 12 original tribes. Effective date: 31 January 1968.
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