Why are people protesting in Tbilisi, Georgia?  The Foreign Agents Bill was promulgated

LONDON – After days of mass protests in Tbilisi, Georgia’s parliament on Friday voted against a controversial law that opponents say would result in silencing free media and human rights defenders.

Politicians voted 35-1, without debate, against the Foreign Agents Act, which the ruling Georgian Dream party said would ensure “at least a minimum level of transparency and accountability” from nonprofits. Georgian Dream said Thursday it was withdrawing the Russian-inspired law.

What are the demonstrations about?

Why are people protesting in Tbilisi, Georgia?  The Foreign Agents Bill was promulgated

Demonstrators on Thursday in Tbilisi, Georgia. (David Mdzinarishvili/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

Tens of thousands of protesters have taken to the streets of Tbilisi to protest the law since Tuesday, when parliament passed the first reading of the law. Protesters said the law could allow the government to label critics “foreign agents”.

“It is important to oppose Russian law at this stage because we know how the dictatorship was formed in Russia and then in Belarus. With such laws, freedom completely disappeared,” student and human rights defender Nikusha Parulava told Yahoo News.

Parulava joined the protests the day they began and witnessed the country’s police manipulating protesters. Water cannon and tear gas were used and it is estimated that over 100 people were arrested. “During the illegal arrests, the police and special forces beat the demonstrators,” Parulava said.

What is the bill about?

Police use tear gas to disperse protesters who have gathered on the streets of Tbilisi, Georgia.

Police used tear gas to disperse protesters during a rally against a “foreign agent” law on Thursday. (Herakli Gedenidze/Reuters)

The Georgian Dream party passed a bill earlier this week that would include two bills on “foreign influence transparency” and “foreign agent registration.” If passed, the laws would require non-governmental organizations such as the media and charities that receive more than 20% of their funding from foreign sources to register as “agents with foreign influence”. Failure to comply can result in fines and, in the worst case, imprisonment.

“Today is a dark day for Georgia’s democracy,” the US Embassy in Georgia said in a statement on the first passage of the law. “The pushing forward of these Kremlin-inspired laws by Parliament is incompatible with the clear desire of the Georgian people for European integration and its democratic development.”

The story goes on

It added: “Prosecuting these laws will damage Georgia’s relations with its strategic partners and undermine the important work of so many Georgian organizations dedicated to helping their fellow citizens.”

A woman with flags, including those of the United States, and a

A woman with flags, including those of the US, and a “We are Europe” sign at a protest against the proposed law. (David Mdzinarishvili/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

After initial uproar, Prime Minister Irakli Garibashvili defended the law, saying: “The future of our country does not and will no longer belong to foreign agents or servants of foreign countries. The future of our country and our people belongs to the patriots.”

A similar law passed in Russia in 2012 began designating NGOs receiving funds from outside the country as “foreign agents.” In 2019, the bill was amended to target independent journalists and bloggers, and expanded a year later to include all individuals in what Human Rights Watch called a move to “repress civil society.”

“It’s very dangerous for me as a journalist,” local reporter Nastasia Arabuli told Yahoo News. “This law is a direct threat to me as I represent an independent media company that is fully funded by the West. We [would] probably one of the first to be declared foreign spies under this law.”

Could it still become law?

The law may not come into force at this time as the ruling party dropped it on Friday. However, nothing prevents the government from reintroducing it in the future. To prevent this, protesters continue to demonstrate outside the Georgian parliament to ensure the law is not passed again by the legislature and to demand the release of anyone arrested during the protests.

A man with a cane walks past a burning police car near the Parliament building in Tbilisi, Georgia.

A man walks past a burning police car near the Parliament building in Tbilisi, Georgia on Thursday. (Zurab Zertsvadze/AP)

According to the Georgian Interior Ministry, 133 of those arrested on Tuesday and Wednesday had been freed by Friday morning.

“We’re pissed,” Arabuli said when asked about the bill. “People are really angry and offended. Nobody wants another Russian law or a repressive regime in Georgia.”