Georgia: the “Venice Commission” calls for the withdrawal of “Russian law”


Europe’s leading human rights organization said Georgia should repeal a “foreign influence” law that has sparked a wave of protests and allegations the government was trying to stifle dissent.

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The European Commission for Democracy through Law, also called “Venice Commission”has gave his opinion regarding the Georgian law called “on transparency of foreign influence”.

Europe’s leading human rights organization says Georgia should repeal a “foreign influence” law that has sparked a wave of protests and allegations the government is trying to stifle dissent .

At the request of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, the Venice Commission evaluated the law under an emergency procedure.

The Commission regretted that the Georgian Parliament adopted the law before receiving its opinion, despite calls from the President of the Parliamentary Assembly and the Secretary General of the Council of Europe.

Citing the numerous protests against this measure, initiated by the ruling party, the Georgian Dreamthe Commission said the government’s adoption of the law “left no space for genuine discussion and meaningful consultation, disregarding the concerns of a large part of the Georgian population“.

“This way of proceeding does not meet European requirements in terms of democratic legislation”she added.

The law modeled on Russian repressive legislation

Last week, the Georgian Parliament approved on third and final reading a controversial bill that sparked weeks of massive protests. Its detractors see it as a threat to democratic freedoms and the country’s aspirations to join the European Union.

The bill requires media outlets, nongovernmental organizations and other nonprofits to register as “pursuing the interests of a foreign power” if they receive more than 20 percent of their funding from abroad .

A similar law, promulgated in Russia, is widely used to muzzle dissenting voices.

The government says this bill is necessary to stem what it sees as harmful foreign influence on the country’s politics and to prevent unspecified foreign actors from trying to destabilize it.

The pro-European president of Georgia, Salomé Zourabishvili, vetoed the lawbut the Georgian Dream should be able to muster enough votes in Parliament to override it.

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