Georgia’s president, Salome Zourabichvili, claimed on Sunday the country was the victim of a Russian “special operation,” as she stood alongside Georgia’s opposition to say she did not recognize the results of the parliamentary election.
She called on Georgians to come to the main street of the capital of Tbilisi on Monday at 7 p.m. local time to protest the result, which she said was a “total falsification, total stealing of your votes.” She spoke the day after an election that could decide Georgia’s place in Europe.
The country’s Central Election Commission said on Sunday that the ruling party, Georgian Dream, got 54.8 per cent of Saturday’s vote with almost 100 per cent of ballots counted.
European electoral observers said the election took place in a “divisive” environment marked by intimidation and instances of physical violence that undermined the outcome of the vote.
The pre-election campaign in the South Caucasus nation of 3.7 million people — a former Soviet republic that borders Russia — was dominated by foreign policy and marked by a bitter fight for votes and allegations of a smear campaign.
Georgians vote at a polling station in Tbilisi on Saturday. (Giorgi Arjevanidze/AFP/Getty Images)
Initial figures suggested turnout is the highest since the ruling party was first elected in 2012.
Monitoring officials from the Organization for Security and Co-Operation in Europe (OSCE) said on Sunday they had multiple concerns about the conduct of the election, including vote buying, double voting, physical violence and intimidation.
Georgian Dream used hostile rhetoric and “promoted Russian disinformation” and conspiracy theories ahead of the election in an attempt to “undermine and manipulate the vote,” Antonio Lopez-Isturiz White of the OSCE said.
Georgian electoral observers, who stationed thousands of monitors across the country, reported multiple violations and said the results “do not correspond to the will of the Georgian people.”
Observers from the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe attend a briefing on Georgia’s parliamentary election, in Tbilisi on Sunday. (Irakli Gedenidze/Reuters)
Georgian Dream has become increasingly authoritarian, adopting laws similar to those used by Russia to crack down on freedom of speech. Brussels suspended Georgia’s European Union membership process indefinitely because of a “Russian law,” passed in June.
Bidzina Ivanishvili, the billionaire founder of Georgian Dream who made his fortune in Russia, claimed victory almost immediately after polls closed, saying, “It is rare in the world for the same party to achieve such success in such a difficult situation.” He had vowed ahead of the election to ban opposition parties should his party win.
Tina Bokuchava, the chair of the United National Movement (UNM) opposition party, accused the election commission of carrying out Ivanishvili’s “dirty order” and said he “stole the victory from the Georgian people and thereby stole the European future.”
Tina Bokuchava, chair of the United National Movement opposition party, speaks to the media at the party’s headquarters in Tbilisi on Sunday. (Vano Shlamov/AFP/Getty Images)
She indicated the opposition would not recognize the results and “will fight like never before to reclaim our European future.”
The UNM party said its headquarters was attacked on Saturday, while Georgian media reported two people were hospitalized after being attacked outside polling stations.
Some Georgians complained of intimidation and being pressured to vote for the governing party.
Supporters of the Georgian Dream, Georgia’s ruling party, wave the country’s and the party’s flags from cars after the announcement of exit poll results, in Tbilisi on Saturday. (Zurab Javakhadze/Reuters)
Georgian Dream scored its highest share of the vote — polling almost 90 per cent — in the Javakheti region of southern Georgia, 135 kilometres west of the capital, where it failed to get more than 44 per cent of the vote in any district.
Before the election, The Associated Press travelled to the region, where many people are ethnic Armenians who speak Armenian, Russian and limited Georgian. Some voters suggested they were instructed how to vote by local officials, while several questioned why Georgia needed a relationship with Europe and suggested it would be better off allied with Moscow.
About 80 per cent of Georgians favour joining the EU, according to polls, and the country’s constitution obliges its leaders to pursue membership in that bloc and NATO. Many fear that Georgian Dream is dragging the country toward authoritarianism and killing off hopes of becoming an EU member.