Thousands rally in Georgia after opposition chief’s arrest

Georgian opposition parties members and supporters march demanding snap polls – three days after police arrested a top opposition leader and raided his party headquarters – in downtown Tbilisi on February 26, 2021. (Photo by Vano SHLAMOV / AFP)

Thousands of anti-government protesters rallied in the Georgian capital Friday to demand early elections after the arrest of a top opposition leader.

Protesters marched through the city’s main street, led by the leaders of all of Georgia’s opposition parties, waving Georgian, EU and US flags, before staging a rally outside parliament building.

Georgia plunged deeper into political crisis following this week’s arrest of Nika Melia — the leader of the main opposition United National Movement (UNM) and a violent police raid on his party headquarters.


“I am in prison, but I am free,” Melia wrote in an address to demonstrators read out at the rally.

“We are fighting for freedom and we will prevail in this struggle.”

Ex-Soviet Georgia has faced political turmoil since parliamentary elections in October that the opposition decried as falsified in favour of the ruling Georgian Dream party, which claimed a narrow victory.

Melia, a 41-year-old who has united Georgia’s traditionally divided opposition forces, has denounced as politically motivated his prosecution on charges of “organising mass violence” during anti-government protests in 2019.

A court in Tbilisi last week ordered Melia to be placed in pre-trial detention after he refused to pay an increased bail fee in the case.


Prime Minister Giorgi Gakharia resigned over plans to arrest Melia, warning it would escalate tensions, but police moved in anyway and detained him on Tuesday.

Friday’s rally was the latest in a series of mass protests the opposition has staged since October, to denounce what it says is political repression and to demand fresh polls.

More protests have been announced for the coming days.

“The protest movement will continue until the ruling party liberates all political prisoners and calls snap elections,” a leader of the opposition Lelo party, Badri Japaridze, told reporters at Friday’s rally.

The United States led a chorus of international condemnation against Melia’s arrest, saying the move was a setback for pro-Western Georgia “on its path toward becoming a stronger democracy in the Euro-Atlantic family of nations”.

Author

Tags

Don't Miss