EuroNews (English)

EU urges Georgia not to pass 'foreign influence' law

- Jorge Liboreiro

The legislatio­n would require media and non-pro t organisati­ons to register as "pursuing the interests of a foreign power" if they receive more than 20% of their funds from abroad, a provision that critics say would be exploited to target and muzzle independen­t voices.

First proposed and later withdrawn last year by the ruling party, Georgian Dream, a nearly identical version of the law has been tabled again, prompting mass protests.

Despite the growing contestati­on, the Georgian parliament advanced the law on Wednesday with 83 votes in favour and zero against in a rst reading boycotted by the opposition. This led Brussels to issue a warning in unambiguou­s, stark terms.

"This is a very concerning developmen­t and the nal adoption of this legislatio­n would negatively impact Georgia's progress on its EU path. This law is not in line with EU core norms and values," Josep Borrell, the bloc's foreign policy chief, and Oliver Várhelyi, the European Commission­er for neighbourh­ood and enlargemen­t, said in a joint statement.

"Georgia has a vibrant civil society that contribute­s to the country’s successful progress towards EU membership. The proposed legislatio­n would limit the capacity of civil society and media organisati­ons to operate freely, could limit freedom of expression and unfairly stigmatise organisati­ons that deliver bene ts to the citizens of Georgia," they went on.

"The EU urges Georgia to refrain from adopting legislatio­n that can compromise Georgia's EU path, a path supported by the overwhelmi­ng majority of Georgian citizens."

The wording was similar to the message sent by Charles Michel, the president of the European Council, on Tuesday evening, in anticipati­on of the parliament­ary vote. Michel underscore­d the candidate status granted to Georgia last December and said the proposed legislatio­n would derail the accession process, which is yet to formally start.

"Let me be clear: the draft Law on Transparen­cy of Foreign In uence is not consistent with Georgia's EU aspiration and its accession trajectory and will bring Georgia further away from the EU and not closer," Michel said on social media.

Georgian President Salome Zourabichv­ili, who has developed a close working relation with Michel and is a passionate advocate of European integratio­n, has vowed to veto the controvers­ial legislatio­n if it ever arrives at her desk. But her opposition could be eventually overridden by the collection of 76 votes.

Zourabichv­ili's term is scheduled to end later this year.

The contentiou­s law has been dubbed the "Russian law" as it has similariti­es with a bill that the Kremlin introduced a decade ago to silence critical voices across the country. Georgia has for years struggled to contain pro-Russian in uence, an issue considered a major roadblock in the country's long-held ambition to join the EU.

"It is exactly a copy of Putin's law," Zourabichv­ili told the BBC.

"Who has decided that this law should be reintroduc­ed? Is it in Georgia or is it beyond our borders? Is it in Moscow that this decision has been taken? That is the main question about transparen­cy that the Georgian population is asking," she said.

Although the Georgian Dream party supports EU accession and condemns the invasion of Ukraine, it also defends a "pragmatic" policy towards Russia.

Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze, who is the party's chairman, says the law is needed to ensure a "minimum standard of transparen­cy" among NGOs and complies with "all basic legal principles." Kobakhidze met earlier this week with the ambassador­s from the EU, the US and the UK to discuss the concerns raised by the bill.

 ?? ?? The European Union has urged Georgia not to pass a controvers­ial 'foreign in  uence' law.
The European Union has urged Georgia not to pass a controvers­ial 'foreign in uence' law.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from France