Irakli Kobakhidze has blamed “EU politicians and their agents” for violent protests in the country
Georgia will not allow a scenario similar to Ukraine’s Maidan to happen, Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze has vowed.
He referred to the unconstitutional Western-backed coup in Kiev a decade ago, which ousted Ukraine’s democratically elected president, triggered hostilities throughout the country and led to the ongoing conflict between Ukraine and Russia.
“Unlike Ukraine in 2013, Georgia is an independent state with strong institutions and, most importantly, experienced and wise people. The Maidan scenario cannot be realized in Georgia. Georgia is a sovereign state and will not allow this,” Kobakhidze said at a briefing on Saturday, as cited by the News Georgia outlet.
According to the premier, much like the Maidan coup, the current violent unrest in Georgia is the result of interference in the country’s internal affairs by EU politicians and their agents.
“The main responsibility for yesterday’s violent rally lies with the relevant European politicians and bureaucrats, with local agents, the fifth column, which is represented by four opposition parties,” he stated. An anti-government demonstration in downtown Tbilisi on Friday resulted in police using tear-gas and water cannons to disperse the crowds.
Kobakhidze slammed the protest as an “attack on the constitutional order in the country.” He expressed gratitude to law enforcement who kept protesters from storming the parliament, saying the officers protected Georgia’s sovereignty and independence.
Protests have been taking place in Georgia since late last month, when the ruling Georgian Dream party secured victory in the parliamentary election. The party is known to advocate pragmatic relations with all neighbors, including Russia, and has recently passed laws considered controversial in the West, including a foreign agents law.
The Georgian opposition and pro-Western President Salome Zourabichvili refused to recognize the election results and called for mass demonstrations. The EU, which granted Georgia candidate status in 2023, sided with the opposition, with the European Parliament condemning the elections as “neither free nor fair” and calling for them to be repeated.
The unrest escalated earlier this week, when Kobakhidze announced that the government would postpone Georgia’s EU accession negotiations until 2028, accusing Brussels of using the talks to meddle in Georgian politics with “constant blackmail and manipulation.” Over 250 people have reportedly been arrested in violent clashes between the police and pro-EU demonstrators at rallies in Tbilisi over the past two days alone.
Violent Western-backed opposition protests, which later became known as the Maidan, broke out in November 2013 after former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich refused to sign an association agreement with the EU.