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Georgian authorities remove opposition protest camp amid election result disputes

Two weeks after the parliamentary elections, the Georgian opposition camped out demanding a rerun of the vote won by pro-Russian Georgian Dream.
georgian authorities remove opposition protest camp amid election result disputes police cracking down protesters tbilisi georgia early morning 19 november 2024
Police cracking down on opposition protesters in Tbilisi, Georgia, early on the morning of 19 November 2024. Photo: RFE/RL
Georgian authorities remove opposition protest camp amid election result disputes

Georgian police cleared an opposition protest camp near Tbilisi State University early on 19 November 2024, mobilizing special forces and water cannons but reportedly using no other riot control equipment as they pushed protesters away and dismantled their tents, according to RFE/RL’s Echo Kavkaza.

Georgia’s October 26 parliamentary elections, which declared the ruling pro-Russian Georgian Dream party victorious, have been widely denounced. Pro-EU President Salome Zourabichvili called the vote “totally rigged,” and international observers reported instances of intimidation and pressure. The opposition has several rallies demanding the annulment of the results, while Zourabichvili announced plans to file a Constitutional Court lawsuit to challenge the outcome. On 17 November, protesters set up around 30 tents near Tbilisi State University in a 24-hour demonstration, which then extended as activists vowed to remain in the streets of Tbilisi until new parliamentary elections are held.

The law enforcement operation resulted in several detentions on Melikishvili Street, Echo Kavkaza says. Before taking action, a police representative had demanded that protesters restore vehicle traffic that had been blocked since 17 November.

Leaders of the Coalition for Change, including Nika Gvaramia, Elene Khoshtaria, and Zurab Japaridze, were present at the scene. Police cleared the roadway of tents, improvised barricades, and vehicles that had been blocking the intersection of Varaziskhevi, Chavchavadze, Melikishvili, and Kekelidze streets, according to Echo Kavkaza.

Two days ago, demonstrators set up approximately 30 tents near Tbilisi State University. Echo Kavkaza says protesters were provided with blankets, mats, and hot tea, while portable toilets were brought to the site.

Rigged election

The protests erupted following the announcement that the Georgian Dream party allegedly secured a 54% majority win, which critics have accused of becoming increasingly authoritarian and Moscow-leaning. The country’s President Salome Zurabishvili condemned the parliamentary elections as a “Russian operation,” accusing them of being conducted under total falsification and describing the outcome as a confiscation of voters’ voices. She has called for mass protests in response.

Many Georgians viewed the vote as crucial for the country’s EU membership prospects. The EU indefinitely suspended Georgia’s membership application process in June following parliament’s passage of a “foreign influence law” that critics compare to Moscow’s civil society restrictions. The ruling party, founded by Russian-made billionaire Bidzina Ivanishvili, has recently adopted laws similar to those used in Russia to restrict freedom of speech and LGBTQ+ rights.

Euronews notes that European election observers described the parliamentary elections as taking place in a “divisive” atmosphere, noting instances of “bribery, double voting and physical violence.

The newly elected parliament is scheduled to hold its first session on 25 November, though opposition parties have announced they will boycott it.

Georgian pro-Russian Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze stated during a Cabinet session on 18 November that “weakening the radical opposition” was one of his government’s key tasks, adding: “We are dealing with people without a homeland, whose weakening is solely beneficial for the development of our country and state.”

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