Georgia drops 'foreign agent' bill after protests

Georgia's ruling coalition March 9 agreed to withdraw a controversial "foreign agent" bill after two days of angry protests in the capital Tbilisi. The bill "On Transparency of Foreign Influence," introduced in Parliament in February, would have required non-governmental organizations and media outlets that receive 20% or more of their annual revenue from a "foreign power" to register as "agents of foreign influence" with the Justice Ministry.

The "Russia inspired" bill drew swift condemnation from Georgian President Salome Zourabichvilli, who has grown increasingly alienated from the ruling coalition. It was also condemned in a statement by the EU. Officials said the bill would have a "chilling effect" on Georgia's EU member candidacy ambitions. The EU urged Georgia to uphold its commitments to "democracy, the rule of law and human rights."

Opponents are still demanding that the bill be formally withdrawn. The controversy has exposed growing political rifts in Georgia. Despite Georgia's aspiration to EU membership, Russia still exerts strong influence over the country. Two northern regions, Abkhazia and South Ossetia, comprising almost 20% of Georgia's total land area, have been occupied by Russian military forces since 2008.

From Jurist, March 9. Used with permission.

EU condemns Georgia admin for reintroducing foreign-agent law

The EU condemned April 4 Georgia's ruling party, Georgian Dream, for reintroducing a controversial foreign-agents law. If the law is adopted, civil organizations that receive over 20% of their funding from abroad must register as "agents of foreign influence." (Jurist)

Protests as foreign agent law advances in Georgia's parliament

Police beat protesters outside Georgia's parliament building April 17 following the body's approval of the first reading of a Russian-style foreign agent draft law. (PRI, NBC)

Georgia parliament cancels session amid mass protests

The Parliament of Georgia cancelled its plenary session on May 2 amid widespread protests over the controversial "foreign agents" bill. Lawmakers stated that the cancellation was due to damage caused to the parliament building as a result of the protests. (Jurist)

Georgia lawmakers pass controversial 'foreign agent' bill

Georgia’s parliament on May 14 adopted a controversial law designating civil society organizations that receive funding from abroad as "foreign agents." The law stipulates that civil society organizations receiving more than 20 percent of their funding from international donors must formally register as "foreign agents."

Ahead of the law’s passage, Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze voiced defiance of the widespread protests against the measure:

If we succumb to unreasoned and falsehood-based external dictates reminiscent of Soviet-style interference, we may soon find ourselves pressured to abandon family values, dilute juvenile protection laws, legalize same-sex marriages, permit drug use and open our borders to uncontrolled immigration—trends that are rapidly taking hold in various countries. Furthermore, our nation cannot perpetually live in a state of externally influenced polarization and radicalism.

(Jurist)