Berliner Boersenzeitung - Tens of thousands rally in Georgia after contested vote

EUR -
AED 3.971841
AFN 71.906688
ALL 98.566681
AMD 418.632151
ANG 1.947771
AOA 986.212797
ARS 1067.866042
AUD 1.642838
AWG 1.949175
AZN 1.843656
BAM 1.953665
BBD 2.182215
BDT 129.148864
BGN 1.956458
BHD 0.407543
BIF 3141.389315
BMD 1.081373
BND 1.428565
BOB 7.467839
BRL 6.161341
BSD 1.080719
BTN 90.86628
BWP 14.517135
BYN 3.536935
BYR 21194.915859
BZD 2.178519
CAD 1.50239
CDF 3146.796335
CHF 0.935874
CLF 0.037146
CLP 1025.120236
CNY 7.705437
CNH 7.698615
COP 4697.485433
CRC 555.293167
CUC 1.081373
CUP 28.656391
CVE 110.759648
CZK 25.362309
DJF 192.181727
DKK 7.45888
DOP 65.316981
DZD 144.248778
EGP 52.661779
ERN 16.220599
ETB 129.764505
FJD 2.454988
FKP 0.827433
GBP 0.83369
GEL 2.941009
GGP 0.827433
GHS 17.474791
GIP 0.827433
GMD 75.696139
GNF 9333.332567
GTQ 8.358865
GYD 226.013009
HKD 8.404422
HNL 27.087964
HRK 7.449613
HTG 142.434345
HUF 404.667717
IDR 17004.216003
ILS 4.037761
IMP 0.827433
INR 90.911536
IQD 1416.598968
IRR 45531.221218
ISK 148.786795
JEP 0.827433
JMD 170.993136
JOD 0.766586
JPY 165.826965
KES 139.497053
KGS 92.786508
KHR 4395.782599
KMF 491.970592
KPW 973.235688
KRW 1496.664368
KWD 0.331551
KYD 0.900616
KZT 530.320266
LAK 23703.701918
LBP 96782.834179
LKR 317.343202
LRD 207.842826
LSL 19.102408
LTL 3.193014
LVL 0.654112
LYD 5.206782
MAD 10.670962
MDL 19.3998
MGA 4990.537601
MKD 61.503004
MMK 3512.25816
MNT 3674.506361
MOP 8.650766
MRU 43.254853
MUR 49.992093
MVR 16.609952
MWK 1876.182317
MXN 21.633309
MYR 4.701788
MZN 69.110633
NAD 19.108198
NGN 1776.469439
NIO 39.794155
NOK 11.888418
NPR 145.385809
NZD 1.809997
OMR 0.416314
PAB 1.080819
PEN 4.060017
PGK 4.325797
PHP 62.938078
PKR 300.351905
PLN 4.350856
PYG 8649.547637
QAR 3.936741
RON 4.974966
RSD 117.075937
RUB 105.643792
RWF 1468.504885
SAR 4.061048
SBD 9.030611
SCR 15.041814
SDG 650.435406
SEK 11.511565
SGD 1.430522
SHP 0.827433
SLE 24.600963
SLL 22675.853077
SOS 617.464076
SRD 36.87861
STD 22382.243159
SVC 9.456666
SYP 2716.983042
SZL 19.107997
THB 36.538522
TJS 11.510115
TMT 3.784806
TND 3.362531
TOP 2.532689
TRY 37.083316
TTD 7.328991
TWD 34.737004
TZS 2949.705168
UAH 44.722626
UGX 3960.671715
USD 1.081373
UYU 44.980844
UZS 13857.797784
VEF 3917331.436809
VES 44.326915
VND 27418.218959
VUV 128.382838
WST 3.029126
XAF 655.240942
XAG 0.032058
XAU 0.000397
XCD 2.922465
XDR 0.812427
XOF 656.393688
XPF 119.331742
YER 270.722181
ZAR 19.137441
ZMK 9733.643618
ZMW 28.775554
ZWL 348.201748
  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    24.62

    -0.04%

  • SCS

    0.0750

    12.585

    +0.6%

  • AZN

    0.9600

    76.01

    +1.26%

  • GSK

    0.3750

    37.895

    +0.99%

  • BCC

    3.1900

    138.57

    +2.3%

  • RIO

    0.9000

    66.18

    +1.36%

  • RBGPF

    -1.0600

    61.94

    -1.71%

  • CMSD

    -0.0200

    24.84

    -0.08%

  • NGG

    0.6600

    66.01

    +1%

  • RYCEF

    0.0000

    7.2

    0%

  • BCE

    -0.1100

    32.68

    -0.34%

  • RELX

    0.7300

    48.15

    +1.52%

  • JRI

    -0.0100

    13.08

    -0.08%

  • BP

    -0.4750

    31.045

    -1.53%

  • BTI

    0.4400

    34.91

    +1.26%

  • VOD

    0.0600

    9.54

    +0.63%

Tens of thousands rally in Georgia after contested vote
Tens of thousands rally in Georgia after contested vote / Photo: Giorgi ARJEVANIDZE - AFP

Tens of thousands rally in Georgia after contested vote

Tens of thousands of Georgians took to the streets Monday to protest against the ruling party's victory in parliamentary polls denounced as "stolen" by the pro-Western opposition, while Georgia's president alleged to AFP that the vote was rigged using "sophisticated" methods she linked to Russia.

Text size:

The Caucasus country -- rocked by mass anti-government protests earlier this year -- has plunged into political uncertainty since Saturday's vote, with Brussels, Washington, France and Germany condemning "irregularities".

According to near-complete results announced by the electoral commission, the ruling Georgian Dream party won 53.92 percent of the vote, compared with the 37.78 percent garnered by a union of four pro-Western opposition alliances.

Georgian Dream has for months been accused by the opposition of steering Tbilisi away from its goal of joining the EU and back into Russia's orbit.

Waving Georgian and EU flags, tens of thousands of demonstrators gathered outside the main parliament building in central Tbilisi, AFP journalists saw.

They sang Georgia's national anthem, "Freedom," before pro-Western President Salome Zurabishvili -- at loggerheads with the ruling party -- addressed the rally.

"Your votes were stolen, but we will not let anyone to steal our future," she told the cheering crowd, adding: "I swear to stand with you until the end on our path towards Europe, where we belong."

Opposition leader Giorgi Vashadze said opposition parties will not enter the new "illegitimate" parliament and voiced their joint demand for "fresh legislative elections" to be held by an "international election administration".

One of the demonstrators, university student Irine Chkuaseli, 19, said: "When I first heard Georgian Dream declared victorious, I felt totally hopeless. But that didn't last long, I quickly shifted to being fired up to fight for the truth."

"Most people feel the same way, and we will not stop until these fake (election) results get cancelled."

Speaking to AFP, Zurabishvili claimed the use of "quite sophisticated" fraudulent schemes in the weekend's vote.

She had earlier declared the election results "illegitimate", alleging a "Russian special operation" to interfere with the election -- a claim swiftly rejected by the Kremlin, whose spokesman Dmitry Peskov said, "there was no intervention".

"It's very difficult to accuse a government, and that's not my role, but the methodology is Russian," Zurabishvili told AFP, adding that it was "difficult to deal with" Russia, which she called "threatening".

A group of Georgia's leading election monitors told a news conference Monday that they had uncovered evidence of complex, large-scale fraud that altered the election outcome in favour of the ruling party.

They called for a swift investigation and demanded the annulment of at least 15 percent of all the votes cast in the elections, claiming to have documented evidence of election rigging at dozens of polling stations.

Defying the EU's concerns over the vote, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban -- current holder of the bloc's rotating presidency and the Kremlin's closest EU associate -- arrived Monday for a two-day visit to Tbilisi.

- 'Irregularities' -

Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze on Monday insisted EU membership remained a "main priority" for his party and said he expected a "reset" with Brussels.

The announced result gave Georgian Dream 89 seats in the 150-member parliament -- enough to govern but short of the supermajority it had sought to pass a constitutional ban on all the main opposition parties.

The polls have prompted widespread international criticism.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken blasted "misuse of public resources, vote buying and voter intimidation", which he said "contributed to an uneven playing field".

An EU parliament mission said the vote was evidence of Tbilisi's "democratic backsliding", adding that it had seen instances of "ballot box stuffing" and the "physical assault" of observers.

Germany and France expressed "concerns" over electoral irregularities.

- Orban arrives -

Orban, who has retained ties to Moscow despite the 2022 Ukraine invasion, tweeted a message of support for the Georgian government on his arrival in Tbilisi on Monday evening.

"Georgia is a conservative, Christian and pro-Europe state. Instead of useless lecturing, they need our support on their European path," Orban wrote on X.

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell has warned that Orban on this visit "does not represent" the bloc on foreign affairs.

Other EU figures condemned the vote -- with some backing the call of the opposition.

"The President of Georgia has announced that the parliamentary elections were falsified. Europe must now stand with the Georgian people," Poland's foreign minister Radoslaw Sikorski said on X Sunday.

Georgia was rocked in May by huge demonstrations against a law on "foreign influence", that critics said mirrored Russian legislation used to silence Kremlin critics.

The United States imposed sanctions on Georgian officials following the protests, while Brussels put EU-hopeful Tbilisi's accession process on halt.

(O.Joost--BBZ)