Ruling party set to win Georgia election amid opposition protests

Elene Khoshtaria, chair of United National Movement, speaks to the media at the coalition's headquarters after the parliamentary election in Tbilisi, Georgia, early Sunday, Oct. 27, 2024. (AP)
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Updated 27 October 2024
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Ruling party set to win Georgia election amid opposition protests

  • The election result would indicate a new setback to the Caucasus country’s bid to join the European Union and put it on a path of closer ties with neighboring Russia

TBILISI: Georgia’s ruling party was on course to win a closely watched election Saturday, according to partial results that were rejected as “falsified” by pro-Western opposition parties which denounced a “constitutional coup.”
The election result would indicate a new setback to the Caucasus country’s bid to join the European Union and put it on a path of closer ties with neighboring Russia.
Brussels has harshly criticized the policies of the Georgian Dream governing party and has said the election will determine Georgia’s chances of joining the bloc.
With votes from more than 70 percent of precincts counted, the central election commission said Georgian Dream was leading with 53 percent, while the main opposition union was on 38 percent.
The result would give Georgian Dream 89 seats in the 150-member parliament — enough to govern but short of the absolute majority it wants to make sweeping constitutional changes. Final results were expected on Sunday.
“Georgian Dream has secured a solid majority,” the party’s executive secretary, Mamuka Mdinaradze, told reporters.
Tina Bokuchava, leader of the opposition United National Movement (UNM), said the results were “falsified” and the election “stolen.”
“This is an attempt to steal Georgia’s future,” she said.
Nika Gvaramia, leader of the Akhali party, called it a “a constitutional coup” by the government. “Georgian Dream will not stay in power,” he said.
The opposition has staged mass demonstrations in recent months against what it says are the government’s attempts to curtail democratic freedoms and steer the country of four million off its pro-Western course.
Rival exit polls published after voting ended had shown the ruling party and the opposition ahead.
Pro-opposition Georgian President Salome Zurabishvili hailed a victory for “European Georgia” despite “attempts to rig” the vote after one exit poll said the opposition won.
After another showed a win for the government, Georgian Dream’s billionaire founder Bidzina Ivanishvili hailed the party’s “success in such a difficult situation.”
“I assure you, our country will achieve great success in the next four years. We will do a lot,” he said.
Hungary’s nationalist Prime Minister Viktor Orban hailed Georgian Dream’s “overwhelming victory” on social media.

In Tbilisi, voters expressed diverging views over their country’s future direction as they cast ballots.
“Of course, I have voted for Europe. Because I want to live in Europe, not in Russia. So, I voted for change,” said Alexandre Guldani, an 18-year-old student.
But Giga Abuladze, who works in a kindergarten run by the Orthodox Patriarchate, said “We should be friends with Russia — and Europe.”
“There is an opposition and so be it but it mustn’t be disruptive. We need to help each other,” the 58-year-old said, praising Ivanishvili.
Opposition parties alleged incidents of ballot stuffing and intimidation during voting.
Zurabishvili said there had been “deeply troubling incidents of violence” at some polling stations.
A video circulated on social media showing a fight between dozens of men outside a polling station in suburban Tbilisi.
Another showed scuffles outside a campaign office in Tbilisi of the United National Movement (UNM), Georgia’s main opposition force, founded by jailed ex-president Mikheil Saakashvili.
The were also videos of an alleged ballot stuffing incident in the southeastern village of Sadakhlo.

Global war party
In power since 2012, the party initially pursued a liberal pro-Western policy agenda. But it has reversed course over the last two years.
Its campaign centered on a conspiracy theory about a “global war party” that controls Western institutions and is seeking to drag Georgia into the Russia-Ukraine war.
In a country scarred by Russia’s 2008 invasion, the party has offered voters bogeyman stories about an imminent threat of war, which only Georgian Dream could prevent.
In a recent TV interview, Ivanishvili painted a grotesque image of the West where “orgies are taking place right in the streets.”
Georgian Dream’s controversial “foreign influence” law this year, targeting civil society, sparked weeks of street protests and was criticized as a Kremlin-style measure to silence dissent.
The move prompted Brussels to freeze Georgia’s EU accession process, while Washington imposed sanctions on dozens of Georgian officials.
The ruling party has also mounted a campaign against sexual minorities. It has adopted measures that ban LGBTQ “propaganda,” nullify same-sex marriages conducted abroad, and outlaw gender reassignment.
The opposition coalition agreed a pro-European policy platform outlining far-reaching electoral, judicial and law enforcement reforms.
It had wanted an interim multi-party government to push through reforms before calling fresh elections.
 


Nigerian police deny church attacks as residents insist 168 people are held by armed groups

Updated 11 sec ago
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Nigerian police deny church attacks as residents insist 168 people are held by armed groups

Kaduna State Police Commissioner Muhammad Rabiu described news reports of the attacks as rumors
It is common for police and locals to have contradicting accounts of attacks in Nigeria’s hard-hit villages

KADUNA, Nigeria: Nigerian police denied reports of simultaneous church attacks in northwestern Kaduna state over the weekend, even as residents shared accounts of kidnappings at the churches in interviews Tuesday.
A state lawmaker, Usman Danlami Stingo, told The Associated Press on Monday that 177 people were abducted by an armed group Sunday. Eleven escaped and 168 are still missing, according to the lawmaker and residents interviewed by AP.
Kaduna State Police Commissioner Muhammad Rabiu described news reports of the attacks as rumors, saying the police visited one of the three churches in the district of Kajuru and “there was no evidence of the attack.”
It is common for police and locals to have contradicting accounts of attacks in Nigeria’s hard-hit villages.
“I am one of the people who escaped from the bandits. We all saw it happen, and anyone who says it didn’t happen is lying,” said Ishaku Dan’azumi, the village head of Kurmin Wali.
Nigeria is struggling with several armed groups that launch attacks across the country, including Boko Haram and Daesh-WAP, which are religiously motivated, and other amorphous groups commonly called “bandits.”
Rights group Amnesty International condemned the “desperate denial” of the attack by the police and government.
“The latest mass abduction clearly shows President Bola Tinubu and his government have no effective plan for ending years of atrocities by armed groups and gunmen that killed thousands of people,” the group said in a statement.
A Kaduna-based Christian group, the Christian Solidarity Worldwide Nigeria, said in a press release that security operatives did not allow its members to visit the sites of the attacks.
“The military officer who stopped the CSWN car said there was a standing order not to allow us in,” Reuben Buhari, the group’s spokesperson, said.
The Chikun/Kajuru Active Citizens Congress, a local advocacy group, published a list of the hostages. The list could not be independently verified by the AP. Police did not respond to a request for questions on the list.
The Christian Association of Nigeria also verified the attacks and has a list of the hostages, according to a senior Christian leader in the state who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of his safety.
“This happened, and our job is to help them. These people came, attacked and picked people from churches,” he said. “But I think they prefer to play the politics of denying, and I don’t think that’s what we want.”
Attacks against religious worship centers are common in Nigeria’s conflict-battered north. They are a part of the country’s complex security crisis that also affects schools, such as in November when hundreds of schoolchildren and their teachers were abducted in another part of Kaduna.
In the past few months, the West African nation has been in the crosshairs of the US government, which has accused the Nigerian government of not protecting Christians in the country, leading to a diplomatic rift. The USlaunched an attack against an alleged Daesh group members on Nigerian territory on Dec. 25, an operation the Nigerian government said it was aware of.