Times of Oman

Georgia’s first female president sworn in

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TELAVI(Georgia): Georgia on Sunday swore in its first female president, Salome Zurabishvi­li as opposition parties continue to denounce her election as fraudulent and demand snap parliament­ary polls.

The inaugurati­on paved the way for a new constituti­on to come into force, transformi­ng the country into a parliament­ary republic with a largely ceremonial president.

The event was held in the mediaeval town of Telavi in Georgia’s eastern winemaking region of Kakheti. French-born Zurabishvi­li, 66, took the oath of office in the courtyard of an 18th-century manor that belonged to Georgia’s penultimat­e king Heraclius II.

“The goal of my presidency is to make Georgia’s democratic developmen­t and its path towards Europe irreversib­le,” she said in an inaugural speech.

“I will facilitate this process with the support of our strategic partner, the United States of America, and our European friends,” she said.

Opposition parties have refused to recognise Zurabishvi­li’s election and tried to hold a protest rally outside the royal residence.

But the plan was thwarted by police, who on Sunday morning blocked a kilometres-long opposition motorcade on a road leading from the capital Tbilisi to Telavi.

Pro-opposition Rustavi-2 TV channel reported that clashes briefly erupted between police officers and protesters as they tried to break through police ranks.

Zurabishvi­li was elected as the ex-Soviet nation’s president last month. She defeated Grigol Vashadze, the candidate of an 11-party opposition alliance led by exiled former president Mikheil Saakashvil­i’s United National Movement.

She was backed in the election by the ruling Georgian Dream party of Georgia’s ex-premier and billionair­e tycoon Bidzina Ivanishvil­i. Ivanishvil­i, Georgia’s richest man, stepped down as prime minister in 2013 after just a year in office but is still widely believed to be Georgia’s de facto ruler. His critics accuse him of “state capture.”

Former French diplomat Zurabishvi­li has said her election was a step forward for women and a move closer to Europe.

Alleged vote-buying

But opposition parties have refused to accept the result, pointing to instances of alleged votebuying, multiple voting, voter intimidati­on, and ballot-stuffing in the November 28 election. On December 2, thousands of opposition supporters took to the streets in Tbilisi against the election result, demanding snap parliament­ary polls. Georgia’s leading rights groups denounced the electoral irregulari­ties, which the US State Department said were “not consistent with the country’s commitment to fully fair and transparen­t elections.”

Observers from the Organisati­on for Security and Cooperatio­n in Europe said that while the election was “competitiv­e” and candidates campaigned freely, it was concerned over “the misuse of state resources” by the ruling party.

In what critics derided as “votebuying” ahead of the election, Ivanishvil­i promised the government would drasticall­y increase social spending and pledged to spend his own money to write off the bank loans of more than 600,000 people.

Zurabishvi­li was born in France to a Georgian family who fled the Bolshevik regime to Paris in 1921.

She studied internatio­nal relations at the prestigiou­s Paris Institute of Political Sciences before a 30-year career as a French diplomat, with postings to the United Nations, Washington and Chad.

Full story @ timesofoma­n.com/world

 ?? Zurabishvi­li’s press service/AFP - HO / Salome ?? ELATED: Georgia’s new President Salome Zurabishvi­li attends her inaugurati­on ceremony in Telavi on December 16, 2018.
Zurabishvi­li’s press service/AFP - HO / Salome ELATED: Georgia’s new President Salome Zurabishvi­li attends her inaugurati­on ceremony in Telavi on December 16, 2018.

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