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- Georgian Parliament Approves Divisive "Foreign Influence" Law That Sparked Weeks of Mass Protests
Georgian Parliament Approves Divisive "Foreign Influence" Law That Sparked Weeks of Mass Protests
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Georgia's parliament has passed a controversial "foreign agents" bill, despite widespread opposition and mass street protests. The bill requires media organizations and non-governmental groups to register as "pursuing the interests of a foreign power", which critics argue is modeled after similar laws in Russia used to crack down on independent news media, nonprofits, and activists critical of the Kremlin. The government claims the bill is necessary to stem harmful foreign influence over the country's politics. The opposition has denounced the bill as "the Russian law" and fears it will be used to strip civil rights.
It is a Russian law. It is an exact duplicate of the Putin law that was adopted a few years ago and then complemented in order to crush civil society.
This is now the normal practice of a huge number of states that are doing everything to protect themselves from outside influence, from foreign influence on domestic politics. And all countries are taking action in one form or another, but all these bills have the same goal.
This is an internal matter of Georgia, we do not want to interfere there in any way.
Once again, there is no way to link this bill and the desire to secure Georgia's internal politics with some kind of Russian influence; this is not the case.
EU member countries are very clear that if this law is adopted it will be a serious obstacle for Georgia in its European perspective.
Georgian parliamentarians face a critical choice – whether to support the Georgian people's Euro-Atlantic aspirations or pass a Kremlin-style foreign agents' law that runs counter to democratic values.
Georgia Foreign Influence Law
- Georgian Parliament Speaker Signs Controversial Foreign Influence Bill Into Law
- Georgia's Parliament Overrules Presidential Veto on Controversial Foreign Influence Legislation
- Georgian President Vets Out Controversial Foreign Influence Legislation
sources
- 1.The Times
- 2.CNN
- 3.France 24
- 4.CTV News
- 5.The Washington Post
- 6.Al Jazeera
- 7.The Guardian
- 8.CNA News
- 9.Daily Sabah
- 10.Le Monde
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.Azerbaijan
- 3.Germany
- 4.Estonia
- 5.France
- 6.United Kingdom
- 7.Ireland
- 8.Italy
- 9.Lithuania
- 10.Latvia
- 11.Russian Federation
- 12.Turkey
organizations
- 1.Kremlin
- 2.European Union
- 3.Georgian Dream
- 4.EU Council
- 5.North Atlantic Treaty Organisation
- 6.United National Movement
- 7.White House
- 8.European Commission
persons
- 1.Salome Zourabichvili
- 2.Irakli Kobakhidze
- 3.Levan Khabeishvili
- 4.Archil Talakvadze
- 5.Bidzina Ivanishvili
- 6.Charles Michel
- 7.Ana Tsitlidze
- 8.Dimitry Samkharadze
- 9.Dmitry Peskov
- 10.Peter Stano
- 11.Anano Plievi
- 12.James O'Brien