Georgia is being rocked by days of violent protests. Here’s what you need to know

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1Days of protests have rocked Georgia following the government’s controversial decision to delay the former Soviet country’s bid to join the European Union.

2Tensions have been brewing for months in the South Caucasus nation of 3.7 million people, where critics accuse the ruling Georgian Dream party of following increasingly authoritarian, pro-Russia policies in a turn away from the West that has tempered hopes for Georgia’s long-promised path to EU membership.

3The protests have been met with a violent police crackdown as the ruling party and thousands of protesters become locked in a deepening battle over the country’s future and whether Georgia should forge closer ties with Russia or Europe.

4Here’s what you need to know.

5Tensions intensified in late October when Georgian Dream claimed victory in a contested election that was widely seen as a referendum on joining the EU.

6Georgia, which gained independence from the Soviet Union in 1991, has for years pursued EU membership, with the goal of joining the bloc written into its constitution.

7Most Georgians support the policy, polls consistently show, and it appeared to be on track last year when the country gained EU candidate status.

8But on November 28, the government signaled a pivot away from Europe in a move which sparked widespread anger.

9Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze said Georgia would suspend EU accession talks for four years after the European Parliament rejected the country’s election results, citing alleged irregularities.

10The Georgian Dream governing bloc accused the EU of using the prospect of accession talks toblackmailGeorgia, and toorganize a revolution in the country.”

11We have decided not to put the issue of opening negotiations with the European Union on the agenda until the end of 2028,” it said. 12Also, we refuse any budgetary grant from the European Union until the end of 2028.”

Protesters shoot fireworks toward police during a fourth day of nationwide protests against a government decision to shelve EU membership talks in Tbilisi early on December 2, 2024. Police in Georgia fired tear gas and water cannon on a fourth straight day of pro-EU protests that drew tens of thousands of people, as the prime minister rebuffed calls for new elections. (Photo by Giorgi ARJEVANIDZE / AFP) (Photo by GIORGI ARJEVANIDZE/AFP via Getty Images)

13The government’s move brought thousands of pro-European Georgians to the streets of the capital Tbilisi, where they have rallied for consecutive nights despite a violent police backlash.

14Reuters videos show protesters waving Georgian and EU flags and chantingRussian slavesat police officers guarding the parliament building. 15Police fired water cannons and tear gas at protesters, while men wearing balaclavas were seen running into the crowds and beating individuals.

16The protests have spread beyond the capital, with Georgian media reporting demonstrations in at least eight cities and towns, according to Reuters.

17Opposition TV channel Formula showed people in the central town of Khashuri throwing eggs at the local Georgian Dream office and tearing down the party’s flag. 18Demonstrators also blocked an access road to the country’s main commercial port in the Black Sea city of Poti, according to Georgian news agency Interpress.

19More than 100 people have been arrested, according to Georgian officials, who claimed protesters threw stones and glass bottles at law enforcement. 20Dozens of people have also been hospitalized.

21Residents have remarked on the forcefulness of the police response, which has been widely condemned internationally.

22I’ve seen a lot of protests in Georgia: during this government, the previous governmentI also remember some from Soviet times,” Tsotne Jafaridze, a winemaker in Tbilisi, told CNN. 23But such aggressiontowards old people, towards the really young guys, towards the womenwas unbelievable.”

24Salome Zourabichvili, the country’s pro-Western president whose powers are mostly ceremonial, claimed that policetargeted journalists and political leaders.”

25She lambasted what she calledbrutal and disproportionate attacks on the Georgian people and media, reminiscent of Russian-style repressionat the protests.

TOPSHOT - Protesters shoot fireworks toward police during a fourth day of nationwide protests against a government decision to shelve EU membership talks in Tbilisi early on December 2, 2024. Police in Georgia fired tear gas and water cannon on a fourth straight day of pro-EU protests that drew tens of thousands of people, as the prime minister rebuffed calls for new elections. (Photo by Giorgi ARJEVANIDZE / AFP) (Photo by GIORGI ARJEVANIDZE/AFP via Getty Images)

26Nearly 80% of Georgians support European integration, according to a poll in December last year by the US non-profit National Democratic Institute.

27Many Georgians also feel a deep hostility towards Russia, which invaded Georgia in 2008 and today occupies about 20% of its internationally recognized territories.

28Since Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, thousands of Russiansespecially men of service agehave fled to Georgia to avoid conscription, tearing at the country’s social fabric as many Georgians express fears of creeping Russification.

29Georgian Dream, founded by a billionaire who made his fortune in Russia, has taken a sharp authoritarian turn in recent years. 30Earlier this year, it pushed through a new Russian-styleforeign agentlaw that allows the government to clamp down on watchdogs, alarming the EU, the US, and its political opponents within Georgia.

31Experts have warned the suspension of EU talks is another sign the country is going down an undemocratic path under Georgian Dream.

32This is a red flag. 33It shows the government is ready to go much further with this,” Ketevan Chachava, a non-resident fellow with the Democratic Resilience Program at the Center for European Policy Analysis (CEPA) told CNN.

34She said she fears Georgia isbecoming a state that is non-democratic, unfree, where liberties are not respected.”

35The United States and the EU have criticized what they see as growing authoritarianism in Georgia and the aggressive response to protesters by police.

36The US State Department condemnedthe excessive use of force by police against Georgiansand said it was suspending the US-Georgia Strategic Partnership due toanti-democratic actionsby the ruling party.

37We reiterate our call to the Georgian government to return to its Euro-Atlantic path, transparently investigate all parliamentary election irregularities, and repeal anti-democratic laws that limit freedoms of assembly and expression,” spokesperson Matthew Miller said in a statement.

38EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said the bloc standswith the Georgian people and their choice for a European future,” in a post on social media.

39We condemn the violence against protesters & regret signals from ruling party not to pursue Georgia’s path to EU and democratic backsliding of the country,” she said. 40This will have direct consequences from EU side.”

41Russia and Georgia have a complicated relationship. 42Since Russia won a five-day war against Georgia in 2008, the two countries have had no diplomatic relations.

43However, relations between Tbilisi and Moscow have become warmer in recent years, helped in part by Georgian Dream’s souring on Europe.

44Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Monday that Russia wasnot interferingin Georgia’s political process and criticized attempts by others todestabilizethe country.

45We have seen similar events in a number of countries. 46Probably the most direct parallel is the events of Maidan in Ukraine. 47All signs (are) of attempting to carry out an Orange Revolution,” he told reporters Monday.

48Peskov referred to the 2014 Maidan Revolution that began after then-President Viktor Yanukovych suspended Ukraine’s preparations for signing an Association Agreement with the EU, in a move seen as cutting ties with the West and lurching back into the Kremlin’s orbit.

49Meanwhile, Dmitry Medvedev, a former Russian president prone to hyperbole who currently sits on the Security Council of Russia, described events in Georgia as an attempted revolution warning on Telegram that the country wasmoving rapidly along the Ukrainian path, into the dark abyss. 50Usually this sort of thing ends very badly.”

51Prime Minister Kobakhidze dismissed the US criticism and said police hadsuccessfully protected the state from another attempt to violate the constitutional order,” according to Reuters.

52Georgian Dream has also denied it is linked to Russia.

53Kobakhidze has insisted the party remains committed to Georgia’s EU bid and is only pushing back onblackmail and manipulationby EU politicians.

54But the West has become skeptical of the party’s intentions.

55So too have hundreds of Georgian diplomats and civil servants, who have signed open letters calling the delay of EU talks unlawful.

56CNN’s Christian Edwards and Catherine Nicholls contributed reporting.

from CNN