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EU countries blast Orban over Georgia visit

Thirteen member states have questioned the parliamentary election results in the former Soviet republic

A group of EU countries have blasted Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban for his visit to Georgia, which they called “premature.”

In a joint statement issued on Monday, 13 member states, including Germany and France, criticized the parliamentary election which took place in the ex-Soviet republic over the weekend for alleged violations of “international norms for free and fair elections.”

According to Georgia’s Central Electoral Commission, the ruling Georgian Dream party, which seeks to build pragmatic relations with Russia, secured 54% of the vote in Saturday’s election. However, pro-Western opposition parties, along with the country’s French-born president, Salome Zourabichvili, refused to recognize the results, accusing Georgian Dream of election rigging.

The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) later reported that it observed no systemic voting irregularities during the election, despite some instances of vote-buying and pressure on public sector employees. However, the US and some EU member countries have called for an investigation into the alleged violations.

“We are deeply concerned about the current situation in Georgia,” the 13 EU states said in their statement, demanding “an impartial inquiry of complaints.”

“We criticize Prime Minister Orban’s premature visit to Georgia. He does not speak on behalf of the EU,” they added.

Orban, who currently holds the six-month rotating presidency of the Council of the EU, became the first foreign leader to visit Georgia following the election. In his speech in Tbilisi on Tuesday, he welcomed Georgian Dream’s election victory, praising the party for “not allowing the country to become a second Ukraine.” He added that after seeing reports from international observers, he concluded that “this election was fair and democratic.”

The people of Georgia made a decision: They voted for peace. The government of Georgia, while enforcing pro-European politics, did not allow their country to become a second Ukraine.

This is not the first time that Orban’s actions have been met with criticism in the EU. Budapest and Brussels have long been at odds over the approach to the Ukraine conflict, with Hungary opposing sending military aid to Kiev and imposing sanctions on Moscow. Tensions escalated further after Orban met with Russian President Vladimir Putin as part of his Ukraine ‘peace mission’ earlier this year.


READ MORE: Orban blasts West’s ‘useless lecturing’ of Georgia

Georgia has been moving towards EU membership since 2022, but Brussels suspended the admission process after the country adopted a number of policies which have been criticized by the West. They include labeling NGOs as ‘foreign agents’ and a ban on LGBTQ ‘propaganda’ to minors.

The Central Electoral Commission earlier announced that due to the disputes over the election results, it intends to recount the ballots at five randomly selected polling stations in each voting district later on Tuesday.

October 29, 2024 at 09:10PM
RT

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