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What’s happening at the protests? ... Police in Tbilisi, Georgia fired tear gas and water cannons on the fourth straight day of pro-EU protests that drew tens of thousands of people, on December ...
Protests continued in Tbilisi for their 36th day on 2 January 2025. [78] On 13 January 2025, Michael Roth, head of the foreign affairs committee of the German Bundestag participated in the 47th daily protest in Tbilisi and stated that "new elections for a new legitimate government and parliament" were needed. He said that because protestors ...
In 2023 and 2024, a series of street demonstrations took place throughout Georgia largely in opposition to the proposed "Law on Transparency of Foreign Influence", which would require non-governmental organizations (NGOs) to register as foreign agents or "organizations carrying the interests of a foreign power" and disclose the sources of their income if the funds they receive from abroad ...
TBILISI (Reuters) -Protesters and police skirmished in Georgia's capital for a fourth straight night on Sunday, with signs that opposition was spreading across the country to the government's ...
The State Security Service of Georgia announces seizing C-4 explosives reportedly bound for Russia and Tbilisi, Georgia's capital. The SSSG reports the involvement of Ukrainian politician of Georgian descent, Andrei Sharashidze, and suggests that the operation might have been part of Ukrainian efforts to draw Georgia into a war with Russia. [31]
TBILISI, Georgia (AP) — Hundreds of opponents of gay rights on Saturday swarmed the site of an LGBT festival in the capital of the country of Georgia, vandalizing the stage, setting fires and ...
The relations between Russia and Georgia on the onset of the Georgian Dream's rule were problematic. Georgia had two separatist entities on its territory, Abkhazia and South Ossetia, which it had lost control over in 1990s as a result of War in Abkhazia and 1991–1992 South Ossetia War. The situation in these regions remained unstable.
A Pride festival was canceled in the Georgian capital of Tbilisi on Saturday by organizers who say authorities failed to prevent violent disruptions from Russian-affiliated far-right groups.