Violence in Georgia after govt delays talks on EU membership

Published November 30, 2024
People gather to protest near the Parliament building in opposition to the government’s decision to delay European Union accession negotiations until 2028 in downtown Tbilisi on November 29, 2024. — AFP
People gather to protest near the Parliament building in opposition to the government’s decision to delay European Union accession negotiations until 2028 in downtown Tbilisi on November 29, 2024. — AFP

TBILISI: Thousands of Georgians rallied for a second day running on Friday after police arrested several in a violent overnight crackdown on protests against the government’s decision to delay EU membership talks.

The Black Sea nation has been rocked by turmoil since the ruling Georgian Dream party declared victory in October parliamentary elections that the pro-EU opposition decried as falsified.

Amid a heavy police presence, several thousand protesters gathered outside the Georgian parliament building on Friday evening, blocking traffic on Tbilisi’s main avenue.

“Georgian Dream’s self-proclaimed government is doing everything it can to destroy Georgia’s chances of joining the EU,” said one demonstrator, 39-year-old schoolteacher Laura Kekelidze.

“They know their authoritarian rule is incompatible with EU membership,” she said.

“But Georgians belong in Europe, and that’s why we are out here in the streets today.”

On Thursday night and Friday morning, riot police fired rubber bullets, tear gas and water cannons to disperse the gathering outside parliament, beating peaceful protesters and journalists, a reporter witnessed.

The interior ministry said 32 of its staff were injured and “43 individuals were detained by law enforcement for disobeying lawful police orders and for petty hooliganism”.

‘Please Moscow’

Thousands of people took to the streets on Thursday after Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze of the ruling Georgian Dream party said his government will not seek to open EU accession talks with Brussels until 2028.

On Friday, he accused the opposition and the EU ambassador to Georgia of distorting his statement and insisted that EU membership “by 2030” remains his “top priority.”

The opposition has accused Georgian Dream of steering Tbilisi away from its long-held dream of joining the bloc and gravitating towards Russia.

Two politicians from the opposition Coalition for Change, Elene Khoshtaria and Nana Malashkhia, were reportedly injured during Thursday’s protests.

Khoshtaria sustained a broken arm, while Malashkhia suffered a broken nose, the coalition said.

Prominent poet Zviad Ratiani was among those arrested, the PEN writers’ association in Georgia said, demanding his immediate release. His lawyer told journalists that he was beaten in custody.

The Council of Europe condemned what it described as the “brutal repression” of protesters, urging Georgia to remain “faithful to European values”.

Ukraine and Poland said on Friday they were “disappointed” by Tbilisi’s decision to pause EU accession talks, with Kyiv accusing the Georgian government of trying to “please Moscow”.

British foreign office minister Stephen Doughty said he was “deeply concerned by reports of excessive use of force by Georgian police against peaceful protestors exercising legitimate democratic rights.”

Published in Dawn, November 30th, 2024

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