Georgia signs ‘foreign influence’ bill into law

Georgian President Salome Zurabishvili attends a joint press conference with foreign ministers of the Baltics and Iceland following their talks in Tbilisi on May 15, 2024. (Photo by Handout / Georgian Presidential Press Service / AFP)

Georgia signed controversial “foreign influence” legislation into law on Monday, prompting its pro-European opposition to vow far-reaching political reforms if they win October’s elections.


The law, which critics say is modelled on Russian legislation used to stifle dissent, has triggered weeks of daily protests in the capital Tbilisi and condemnation from Georgia’s Western partners.

Brussels has warned the move will derail the Black Sea nation from its path to European Union membership, and the United States has also threatened Georgian officials with individual travel bans.

Despite those warnings, the speaker of Georgia’s parliament Shalva Papuashvili on Monday signed the measures into law — the final approval stage after the chamber voted last week to override a veto lodged by President Salome Zurabishvili.

“I signed today the law on transparency of foreign influence, whose main goal is to strengthen the sustainability of Georgia’s political, economic, and social systems,” Papuashvili said in a statement.


The measures require NGOs and media outlets that receive at least a fifth of their funding from abroad to register within two months as “organisations pursuing the interests of a foreign power.”

The plans sparked nearly two months of daily mass protests that saw police use tear gas and water cannon to disperse rallies, beating and arresting demonstrators.

– Pro-EU charter –

The measures have exposed and deepened divisions in Georgian society ahead of parliamentary elections scheduled for October 26.


The vote is seen as a key test of Georgia’s democracy more than 30 years after Tbilisi gained independence with the break-up of the Soviet Union.

On Monday, almost all of Georgia’s opposition parties began signing up to a pro-European policy charter advanced by President Zurabishvili in a bid to create a united front ahead of the vote.


They agreed to pursue far-reaching electoral, judicial and law enforcement reforms through an interim multi-party government, should they win enough seats in parliament to command a majority.

Early elections would then be called next year, the groups agreed.

The plan would involve revoking the “foreign influence” law and several other pieces of legislation adopted by Georgian Dream which the opposition says are “detrimental to Georgia’s European course.”

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