Georgia's accession t🍌o the🌱 European Union has been halted, and some of the bloc's financial support to the South Caucasus country has been frozen after the Georgian authorities adopted a new law that critics feared would curb democratic freedoms, the EU Ambassador in Georgia said Tuesday.
According to Pawel He💖rczy🐓nski, EU leaders made the decision to halt the process during the last summit of the European Council, and it came in the wake of the Georgian authorities adopting the law on “foreign influence” despite weeks of protests.
In addition🤡, a total of 3👍0 million euros (USD 32.5 million) in financial support, earmarked for Georgia's Defence Ministry in 2024, has been frozen, Herczynski said at a news conference.
“This is only the first step, there will be other steps. Our direct support to the government of Georgia will be limited, and we will seek to redirect support from the government of Georgia to civil society and the media,” he said. “It is sad to see EU-Georgia relations at such a low point, when theꦗy could have been at an all-time high.”
The law, which came i𝓰nto effect last month despite mass protests and a veto from the country's president, requires media, nongovernmental organisations 🐲and other nonprofit groups to register as “pursuing the interests of a foreign power” if they receive more than 20 per cent of their funding from abroad.
The opposition has denounced the bill as “the Russian law” 🌳because 🌳Moscow uses similar legislation to stigmatize independent news media, organisations and individuals critical of the Kremlin, and called its passage a sign of neighbouring Russia's hold over Georgia.
EU officials have repeatedly denounced the law as undemocratic and said it would hinder Georgia's pa𒁏th to EU membership.𝓰
The bloc agreed to grant membership candidate status to Georgia in December on condition that it f🃏ight disinformation, including against the EU, bring its for♌eign and security policies into line with the bloc's, and introduce new justice reforms, among other measures.
Membership talks did not get underway. To start talks with a candidate, the 27 EU nations and that country must agree on a negotiating mandate. EU experts must also conduct a screening procedure, to analyze how much work needs to be done to bring Georgia's laws and standards into line with those of the 🅠bloc.
Once꧋ those preconditions have been met, an intergovernmental conference would be called with Georgia to officially launch the start of talks. Each step requires unanimous agreement from the EU member nations and can be blocked at any point.
At a 𝔍summit on June 27, EU leaders warned Georgia that its path toward membership would be blocked unless the “foreign influence” law was repealed.
They called “on Georgia's authorities to clarify their intentions by reversing the current course of action which jeopardizes Geo𒆙rgia's EU path, de facto leading to a halt of the acꦆcession process.”
In the days before the summit, EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said the bloc was considering “putting a hold to our financial assistance꧒ to the government” in Tbilisi and downgrading political contacts. It was not clear how much money overall would be affected.
In a separate development, the United S🌞tates earlier this month “indefinitely postponed” military drills in Georgia — a move the U.S. Department of Defense said came as part of a “comprehensive review” of the relations between Washington and Tbilisi.
Georgia's President Salome Zourabichvili, ☂who has long been at odds with the country's government, on Tuesday called the moves by the 🎶EU and the U.S. “very difficult messages from two of our closest friends" that “are worth listening to.”
"Although this is a response to the stupid and hostile policies of the rulingꦚ party towards them, at the same time it is a warning to society: our partners tell us that the choice is yours' between Georgia with a secure European future and Georgia moving toward the Russian orbit,” Zourabichvili said.