Georgia's pro-EU Generation Z spearheads 'foreign agent' protests
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[May 15, 2024]
By Felix Light
TBILISI (Reuters) - For 20-year-old Georgian student Irakli, the almost
nightly trip to protest outside parliament is part of a wider struggle
where he and his generation have a special role to play.
For weeks, the international relations student and his classmates have
joined the huge crowds protesting against a draft law on "foreign
agents" that passed its third and final reading in parliament on
Tuesday.
"Every event that was important in our history, in the history of
Georgia ... was dominated by young people," Irakli told Reuters outside
the main campus of Tbilisi State University, where hundreds of students
walked out of classes this week.
"It’s a tradition of Georgia’s," he said, citing the youthful
nationalist movement that pushed for the country’s independence from the
Soviet Union before its 1991 collapse.
Ever since Georgia’s government announced in April that it was reviving
a bill that would oblige NGOs to label themselves as foreign agents if
they receive over 20% of their funding from abroad, young Georgians in
their teens and 20s have been at the forefront of the pushback.
Though opposition to the bill cuts across age groups, younger Georgians
have been especially visible and vocal. On Monday, students at a string
of educational institutions around the country said they would join an
academic strike, demanding that it be withdrawn.
The draft law has been dubbed "the Russian law" by opponents, who
compare it to legislation used by the Kremlin for the past decade to
crack down on its opponents. The ruling Georgian Dream party says it is
needed to promote transparency, combat "pseudo-liberal values" promoted
by foreigners and preserve the country's sovereignty.
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The European Union says it will be an obstacle to Georgia’s joining the
bloc, for which it was given candidate status in December.
The prospect of EU membership is widely popular in Georgia, and the
ruling party says it wants the country to join both the EU and NATO,
despite recent anti-Western rhetoric.
But for many of the young protesters, the struggle represents a stark
choice over whether Georgia should integrate with Europe or rebuild old
ties to Russia.
CLASH OF GENERATIONS
Laliko, a first-year computer science student who walked out of class at
Tbilisi State University on Monday, said opposing the law was necessary
"to allow us to have the European future that we want, and that we
deserve".
Unlike older Georgians, some of whom retain a nostalgia for the Soviet
Union, younger Georgians have fewer sentimental bonds to Russia.
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Demonstrators hold a rally to protest against a bill on "foreign
agents", in Tbilisi, Georgia, May 1, 2024. REUTERS/Irakli Gedenidze/File
Photo
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Having grown up in a period when Russia imposed a stringent visa
regime on Georgians, relatively few have ever made the short trip to
their vast northern neighbor, or speak its language.
Many speak good English and some have travelled within the EU thanks
to a visa-free regime for Georgians, making them more inclined to
see their country's future as interwoven with Europe.
Zurab Japaridze, the 48-year-old leader of Girchi - More Freedom, a
pro-EU libertarian party that has a mostly youthful following and
has been backing the protests, said that Georgia’s present crisis
reflected a clash of generations.
"We have a generational conflict in a sense, where the younger
generation is more willing and eager and ready to fight for their
freedom while the older generation has some kind of nostalgia for
Soviet times."
But if Georgia’s Gen-Zers are clear in their dislike of the
government, few are sold on the main alternatives.
Georgia’s fractious and divided opposition parties remain dominated
by the United National Movement (UNM) party of ex-President Mikheil
Saakashvili, who is now serving a six-year prison sentence for abuse
of power.
But though Saakashvili, who led Georgia from 2003 to 2013, remains a
deeply polarizing figure among those who lived under his government,
many younger Georgians have little memory of his tenure.
Student Linako Giunashvili said she hated the UNM and wanted greater
political choice. "We want to vote for many, many parties. The more
parties there are in the parliament, the more voices will be heard,"
she said.
Japaridze said that many of the young people who risked arrest at
the nightly protests had little interest in the country’s formal
opposition politics.
“They are not members or even supporters of any political parties,”
he said.
“But they know what they want. They want Georgia in the EU and
they’re ready to fight for it.”
(Reporting by Felix Light; Editing by Mark Trevelyan and Alison
Williams)
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