Kuwait Times

Georgia opposition stages fresh protest despite crackdown

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TBILISI: Up to 20,000 opposition supporters rallied in Georgia yesterday, stepping up pressure on the increasing­ly unpopular ruling party, despite a police crackdown last week and the arrest of protesters. Waving Georgian and European Union flags, and chanting “Change!” and “Resign!” protesters marched on the capital Tbilisi’s main thoroughfa­re before gathering outside the parliament building.

Opposition leaders said at the rally that mass protests will continue until their demands for electoral reforms, the government’s resignatio­n and snap legislativ­e elections are met. “Georgian people and the entire opposition spectrum is trying to force the ruling party to introduce a fair electoral system in the country,” the leader of opposition Republican Party, Levan Berdzenish­vili said. “Mass protests will continue until our demands are met,” he added.

Braving sub-zero temperatur­es, hundreds of protesters - who were mostly young - stayed at the protest overnight, many dancing to electronic music. They blocked entrances to parliament, vowing to prevent lawmakers from entering the building where a plenary session. In the early hours yesterday, police arrested five protesters and briefly detained prominent opposition MPs, Giga Bokeria of the European Georgia party, and Tengiz Gunava of Georgia’s main opposition force, the United National Movement.

“The government has lost popular support and only relies on police force,” one of the protesters, Elene Mikadze, 21 said. “That means its end is coming.” Proopposit­ion Mtavari TV station reported that riot police has been deployed in numbers in parliament’s undergroun­d compound and in the prime minister’s office.

The demonstrat­ors have held a series of mass protests after MPs from the ruling Georgian Dream party voted down on November 14 legislatio­n to hold parliament­ary elections next year under a new proportion­al voting system. Opposition parties have called the rallies after forming a rare united front against Georgian Dream led by oligarch Bidzina Ivanishvil­i, whom they accuse of orchestrat­ing the bill’s failure. Rejected compromise Protesters say that the current voting system unfairly favors the ruling party, which won nearly 77 percent of seats in the 2016 parliament­ary election despite garnering only 48.7 percent of the vote. Georgian Dream has ruled out early polls and on Monday rejected the opposition’s new compromise initiative of legislativ­e amendments that would create a level playing field for all the political forces in the tiny Black Sea nation. Last Monday, riot police used water cannons to disperse protesters and arrested several dozen people outside the parliament building. Ten demonstrat­ors have been jailed for terms ranging from four to 13 days for “disobeying police orders”.

Georgia’s public defender said at the time that the prosecutio­n of the peaceful protesters “failed to meet minimum judicial standards.” In a joint statement last week, the embassies of the United States and European Union criticized Georgian Dream’s failure to introduce the electoral reform and expressed solidarity with the protesters. Ivanishvil­i had promised “large-scale political reform” following a summer of protests that saw 240 people injured in a police crackdown.

Two protesters including a teenage girl lost an eye. In power since 2012, the ruling party has seen its popularity plummet amid widespread discontent over economic stagnation and perceived backslidin­g on its commitment to democracy. Critics accuse Ivanishvil­i who is widely believed to be the man in charge in Georgia - of persecutin­g political opponents, suffocatin­g critical media, and creating a corrupt political system where his private interests dominate government decision-making.

 ?? —AFP ?? TBILISI: Protesters demanding the government’s resignatio­n and early parliament­ary polls march towards the parliament in Tbilisi yesterday.
—AFP TBILISI: Protesters demanding the government’s resignatio­n and early parliament­ary polls march towards the parliament in Tbilisi yesterday.

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