Georgian president vetoes ‘foreign influence’ law
Georgia’s president has vetoed a “foreign agents” bill that has split the country and appealed to the government not to overrule her over a law she said was “Russian in sprit and essence”, The Guardian reports.
Salome Zourabichvil followed through on her stated intention to use her veto on Saturday although the governing Georgian Dream party has the votes to disregard her intervention.
“Today I vetoed a Russian law,” she said. “This law is Russian in its essence and spirit.
“It contradicts our constitution and all European standards, therefore it represents an obstacle to our European path.”
Under the law on transparency of foreign influence, which passed its third and final reading last Tuesday, civil society organisations and media receiving more than 20% of their revenues from abroad will be obliged to register “organisations serving the interests of a foreign power”.
The legislation has brought hundreds of thousands of people out on to the streets of the capital Tbilisi who accuse the government of trying to smear dissenting voices as traitors.
The legislation is regarded as a copy of a law introduced in Russia in 2012 and which was used as a tool for repressing those with sympathies to the west.
The EU has said that the law will be an obstacle to the country’s accession to the bloc while the US has warned that the legislation and the government’s anti-western rhetoric is turning Georgia into an “adversary” and that it could pull billions in economic and military aid.
Under the Georgian constitution, a president has two weeks to either sign and promulgate the law or send an argued alternative back to the parliament in the form of “justified remarks.”