On Tuesday morning, the Georgian Parliament announced it would hold the first hearing of the foreign agent draft law on Thursday, but announced shortly after that morning’s protesters had dispersed that the hearing of the law would take place the same day instead.
The foreign agent law was widely condemned domestically and internationally as a Russian-style law that threatens Georgia’s democracy and Euro-Atlantic prospects.
Crowds flocked to parliament almost immediately after the announcement, moving to Rustaveli Avenue, Tbilisi’s main thoroughfare, around 17:00.
Tens of thousands could be heard chanting ‘Putin khuylo’ (Putin is a dick) and ‘monebo’ (slaves) in front of parliament as the first version of the foreign agent law passed its first plenary hearing. Riot police started to appear as the voting began.
While shouts and boos greeted the announcement, protesters remained in the streets well into the night, despite attempts by police to disperse them with pepper spray and water cannons.
Shortly before midnight, as protesters continued to show no signs of leaving, riot police began to fire tear gas at those gathered by parliament.
Crowds dispersed briefly, but returned as soon as the chemical weapon had settled.
Rather than leaving the area, protesters instead got closer to parliament, taking down barricades in front of the building’s main entrance and raising chants through a loudspeaker system.
Some of those standing on the building’s facade threw rocks at parliament, while a couple of protesters are reported to have launched petrol bombs at riot police.
At around 01:00 in the morning, large numbers of riot police closed in on the gathered protesters as the crowds were heavily teargassed.
Demonstrators dispersed, with many seeking shelter behind and within Kashveti Church, but returned to Rustaveli Avenue shortly afterwards, in a back-and-forth that continued into the early hours of the morning. At around 4:00 am, police began to detain some of those remaining.
Russia will allow Georgian citizens to stay in the country without a visa for more than 90 days, including for the purposes of working and studying.
President Putin signed the decree to expand the visa-free regime for Georgian citizens on Thursday, which went into effect immediately.
According to the document, the visa-free entry regime to Russia now applies to citizens of Georgia arriving ‘to the Russian Federation for the purpose of carrying out work activities or for a period of more t
The Constitutional Court of Georgia has declined a motion to suspend the foreign agent law pending a final ruling on its constitutionality.
On Wednesday, the court announced it had agreed to hear the case against the law, more than a month after four separate lawsuits against it were filed and merged into one appeal.
According to their decision, none of the law’s articles will be suspended until the case is resolved. Two of the eight judges, Giorgi Kverenchkhiladze and Teimuraz Tughushi,
The deployment of new electronic voting systems in Georgia as the country faces a critical election brings with it a number of risks.
With less than a month to go before the 2024 parliamentary elections on 26 October, Georgia’s voters are facing a critical juncture with the potential to transform the country’s immediate and long-term future.
Alongside an unprecedented political landscape and a first ever fully proportional election, voters will also be faced with large-scale use of electron
The European Union delegation in Georgia has stated that the country will lose €121 million ($130 million) in EU funding ‘as a result of democratic backsliding’.
On Tuesday, an EU representative explained that ‘annual allocations are not all spent in the same year, hence remaining funds from 2022 and 2023 directly benefiting the authorities will be lost’.
According to a post on Facebook by the European Commission’s Directorate-General for EU Neighbourhood and Enlargement, the money was ‘w