Brit 'beaten by police, framed for being a
by SABRINA PENTY · Mail OnlineA British man who was arrested in Georgia last week after 200,000 people took to the streets of the capital to protest against the government says he was beaten up by police who tried to frame him as a Western spy.
Daniel Travis, 28, was detained last Saturday for allegedly breaking into the parliament building, but was finally released from custody yesterday.
The ferocious protests were sparked by the government's decision to suspend negotiations about the country joining the European Union.
Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze suggested the Brit was a 'foreign instructor' who had been tasked with orchestrating violence.
Speaking to The Times upon his release, Travis denied the Georgian leader's claims and said he had not attended the protests.
He said he was walking home from a nearby bar when masked riot police beat him up and dragged him into parliament in an attempt to pin him as a British spy.
Once inside, he said he was interviewed by pro-government media.
'They tried to make me look like this spy or whatever they're trying to make me out to be', the Briton said.
'I never tried to break into the parliament. The amount of police there, it's impossible for anybody to break in. It's f***ing ridiculous.
'I've never worked in a government agency. I've always been law abiding. I don't go to protests even in England, never mind, you know, in a country where I don't know the language', he said.
Travis was sentenced to 10 days in prison on public disorder charges.
Speaking of the detention centre where he was held, Travis said it was 'very small and dirty' and claimed he was not fed for three days.
'I'm mentally not right with it. It's really taken a lot from my health and, you know, it's been pretty tough.'
Georgia plunged into a full-on civil revolt last week as countless protesters overran Tbilisi and clashed with police, following the government's decision to shelve the EU accession bid.
The country's parliament building was set alight by furious rioters who threw fireworks and stones, while an effigy of Bidzina Ivanishvili, the shadowy founder of the ruling Georgian Dream (GD) party, was stuffed on a stake and set alight to whoops and cheers from the crowd.
Fireworks were also thrown as riot police, with one video showing a lone protester taking aim at cops with a firework 'machine gun'.
Police were accused of brutalising protesters. Witnesses reported seeing protesters in Tbilisi being chased and beaten by police as demonstrators rallied in front of the country's parliament.
One video showed a woman lying weakly on the ground and a police officer kicked her head, before she collapsed as a second cop ran up and kicked her.
Observers could be heard screaming as they witnessed the violent scene. Officials said that 44 people were hospitalised by police-deployed water cannons and tear gas.