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- EU urges Georgia to withdraw "foreign agent" Bill
EU urges Georgia to withdraw "foreign agent" Bill
Thousands of protesters gathered outside Georgia's parliament in Tbilisi, expressing concerns that a new contentious legislation will derail the nation's course towards European Union membership. The legislation, known as the "transparency of foreign influence" bill, was passed by Parliament on Tuesday and requires organizations receiving more than 20% of their funding from abroad to register as agents of foreign influence. The EU has urged Georgia to withdraw the law, stating that its adoption would negatively impact the country's progress on the EU path. The EU foreign policy chief emphasized that the measure would set back Georgia's ambitions to join the bloc. NATO also warned Georgia that the approval of the bill is a "step in the wrong direction" and moves the country away from European and Euro-Atlantic integration.
The EU has clearly and repeatedly stated that the spirit and content of the law are not in line with EU core norms and values.
What is happening now goes beyond targeting civil society organisations; it is an attack on the western values.
We talked about what the next steps are. I very clearly explained to the representatives of friendly countries that with my veto, I would under no circumstances enter into some fake, artificial, deceitful negotiations. No and never!
I will not betray the spirit that is in this country today and needs to open a path. I will be the opener of this path. This message will be delivered by our friends everywhere so that no one thinks that you can use the President of Georgia to save the image of this government.
Georgia Foreign Influence Law
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- Georgian President Vets Out Controversial Foreign Influence Legislation
sources
- 1.Al Jazeera
- 2.The Guardian
- 3.The Times of India
- 4.DW News
- 5.Haaretz
- 6.Le Monde
- 7.CNA News
- 8.CNN
- 9.France 24
- 10.Guardian
perspectives
- 1.US Foreign Policy
- 2.Russian Foreign Policy
- 3.Protests
- 4.Authoritarianism
- 5.Freedom of Speech
- 6.European Commission under Ursula von der Leyen
- 7.Freedom of the press
- 8.Hungary under Viktor Orbán
- 9.Russia-Georgia Ties
countries
- 1.Armenia
- 2.Estonia
- 3.Spain
- 4.France
- 5.Hungary
- 6.Ireland
- 7.Lithuania
- 8.Latvia
- 9.Moldova, Republic of
- 10.Nicaragua
- 11.Nauru
- 12.Russian Federation
organizations
- 1.European Union
- 2.Georgian Dream
- 3.Kremlin
- 4.European Commission
- 5.North Atlantic Treaty Organisation
- 6.Transparency International
- 7.Georgian Institute of Politics
- 8.Georgian Young Lawyers' Association
- 9.Girchi
- 10.Illia State University
- 11.SHAME Movement
- 12.State Duma
persons
- 1.Salome Zourabichvili
- 2.Josep Borrell
- 3.Bidzina Ivanishvili
- 4.Irakli Kobakhidze
- 5.James O'Brien
- 6.Oliver Varhelyi
- 7.Vladimir Putin
- 8.Aleko Elisashvili
- 9.Ana Tsitlidze
- 10.Archil Talakvadze
- 11.Baia Pataraia
- 12.Dachi Imedadze