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Georgia | A new president invested, the outgoing still says she is “legitimate”

(Tbilisi) Georgia on Sunday invested a new president, contested by the streets, because he is loyal to power unlike the outgoing head of state, a new episode in a political crisis underway for weeks, marked by pro-demonstrations. large-scale Europeans.


Posted at 8:58 a.m.

Irakli METREVELI

Agence -Presse

Mikheïl Kavelashvili, known for his ultraconservative and anti-Western positions, was sworn in in Parliament to succeed Salomé Zourabichvili after being elected on December 14 by an electoral college controlled by the ruling Georgian Dream party.

“Peace has always been one of the main goals and one of the main values ​​​​of the Georgian people,” Mr. Kavelashvili said in his speech, while his camp presents itself as a bulwark against the West which would like to drag Tbilisi in the war between Russia and Ukraine.

A few minutes earlier, after leaving suspense hanging over her intentions, Salomé Zourabichvili announced to her supporters that she was leaving the presidential palace, while calling herself the “only legitimate president” of the country.

PHOTO DARO SULAKAURI, REUTERS

Salomé Zourabichvili, outgoing president

“I will leave the presidential palace to stand by your side, carrying with me the legitimacy, the flag and your trust,” she said.

Red card

After the inauguration of the new head of state, a few thousand protesters marched from the presidency to the Parliament, the focal point of the demonstrations which have punctuated life in the Georgian capital for weeks.

Some brandished red cards, in reference to the new president’s footballing past.

Then, most dispersed peacefully, some promising to demonstrate again in the evening and a few dozen others remaining where they were.

PHOTO ZURAB TSERTSVADZE, ASSOCIATED PRESS

Protesters hold up red cards in front of the Georgian Parliament where President-elect Mikheil Kavelashvili, a former football player, takes the oath of office, in Tbilisi, Georgia, December 29, 2024.

If some regretted the outgoing president’s choice to leave the presidential palace, they also said they were determined to continue their fight.

“I am a little disappointed by the president’s decision,” but “she does not want to destabilize, polarize the country,” said David, 22, who came to listen to her.

“We will continue to participate in the protests until there is real change,” insisted Guiorgui Mamatelachvili, a 34-year-old computer engineer.

Georgia, a country in the Caucasus and the former USSR, has been in turmoil since the legislative elections of October 26, won by the Georgian Dream party, in power since 2012, but denounced as rigged by the pro-Western opposition who is now demanding demonstrators and Mme Zourabichvili, a new election.

The situation was exacerbated on November 28 when Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze announced the postponement of EU integration efforts until 2028, triggering daily pro-European protests that have not stopped since.

With the departure of Mme Zourabichvili, the demonstrators lose their main support within the institutions. Although limited by restricted prerogatives, it gave all its support to the streets and used its influence, particularly internationally, to increase pressure on the Georgian Dream party and try to obtain the organization of new legislative elections, which the government continues to refuse.

Western sanctions

The ruling party accuses the opposition of wanting to provoke a revolution, according to it, financed from abroad.

During the first 10 days of protests in Tbilisi in late November and early December, police dispersed the crowds with water cannons and tear gas. Demonstrators responded by setting off fireworks and throwing projectiles at the police.

If demonstrations remain daily, clashes are much rarer.

In total, more than 400 people were arrested, including opposition leaders, and dozens of police officers injured. The Georgian human rights ombudsman, Levan Iosseliani, reported “torture” of detainees by the police.

Last week, the United States and the United Kingdom imposed sanctions on several senior Georgian officials. Washington announced that they were targeting in particular the billionaire Bidzina Ivanishvili, who de facto controls the Georgian Dream party.

The party is accused by its detractors of abandoning a liberal and pro-European program in favor of an authoritarian drift and of wanting to turn the country towards Moscow. The party thus passed controversial laws similar to those existing in Russia, targeting civil society, independent media and LGBT+ rights.

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