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Showing posts with label Georgia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Georgia. Show all posts

Friday, August 29, 2025

More Politics in Europe > EU demanding Georgia open 2nd front in proxy war with Russia; French want Macron out - Salvini; Germany - 'We are in a structural crisis'

 

EU used ‘direct threats, blackmail’ to polarize Georgia

– Tbilisi mayor

Brussels is punishing the country for refusing to fight Russia for Ukraine, Kaladze has said
EU used ‘direct threats, blackmail’ to polarize Georgia – Tbilisi mayor











European Union officials are spreading “lies, slander and misinformation” to put pressure on Georgia, Tbilisi Mayor Kakha Kaladze asserted on Monday. The bloc had failed before in trying to draw the country into war with Russia using the same approach, he noted.

Kaladze, a former professional footballer who is now running for re-election as the ruling Georgian Dream party’s candidate, made the comments during a press conference after being pressed by opposition journalists about deteriorating ties with Brussels.

“Direct threats, blackmail and insults were directed to the prime minister’s office to launch a second front,” Kaladze said. “Promises were made: ‘we will help, you will be provided with everything, with appropriate equipment,’ etc.”

Georgia has sought EU membership, but relations soured after the bloc accused the government of backsliding on democratic reforms. Kaladze rejected the criticism, insisting that the country's progress towards meeting the requirements for candidacy is being ignored for political reasons.

”As soon as a political narrative is introduced by some European bureaucrats, an unfair assessment immediately occurs. In general, their assessments are based on lies, slander, and misinformation,” he said.

The EU supports Georgia's pro-Western opposition parties, which launched mass protests over alleged election fraud last year, and threatened to revoke visa-free travel. Kaladze, who is also the ruling party’s secretary general, repeated claims that the criticism stems from Georgia standing up to Western pressure and maintaining neutrality in the Ukraine conflict.

Introducing sanctions or fighting Russia militarily would have been ruinous and no responsible government could have taken that path, he said.

Georgia and Russia fought a brief armed conflict in 2008 after then-President Mikhail Saakashvili launched an assault on South Ossetia, where Russian peacekeepers were stationed. Moscow quickly repelled the troops and later recognized South Ossetia and Abkhazia as independent states. Tbilisi, however, still claims sovereignty over the territories.

The current government has blamed Saakashvili for the clash, accusing him of betraying national interests under foreign influence. The conflict broke out months after NATO pledged eventual membership for Georgia.




French want Macron to leave office

– Italian deputy PM

The president has been trying to boost his extremely low popularity with warlike rhetoric, Matteo Salvini has claimed
French want Macron to leave office – Italian deputy PM











Some 80% of France’s population “can’t wait” for President Emmanuel Macron to leave office, Italian Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini has claimed. Macron’s warlike rhetoric, including talk of sending troops to Ukraine, is aimed only at boosting his dwindling popularity at home, Salvini asserted.

The deputy PM made the remarks shortly after Paris summoned Italian Ambassador Emanuela D’Alessandro over his previous statements concerning Macron. Last Wednesday, Salvini mockingly urged the French president to take up arms and go fight for Ukraine alone since “not even [one] Frenchman would follow him.”

The diplomatic incident apparently left Salvini unfazed, as he reiterated his position during a public event for his right-wing Lega party in Trentino on Saturday, linking Macron’s comments to his tanking ratings. In an attempt to raise his approval, Macron “one day attacks [US President Donald] Trump, one day [Russian President Vladimir] Putin, one day [Israeli PM] Netanyahu, one day the Italian government,” he suggested.

“For months now, he’s been harping on about war, the nuclear umbrella, bazookas, missiles, and a European army. Do you know why? In my opinion, they cooked all this up because Macron’s popularity at home is at its lowest,” Salvini stated, adding that some “80% of the French can’t wait for Macron to leave.”

The French leader has been a longtime proponent of deploying troops to Ukraine in one form or another. Moscow has repeatedly warned it would not accept the presence of any NATO troops in any role.

Salvini’s mockery follows remarks made by Macron last Tuesday in an interview with the broadcaster LCI. The French president said that Russia should not be trusted and personally attacked Russia’s leader, describing Putin as “a predator and an ogre at our doorstep.” 

“I am not saying that France will be attacked tomorrow, but the menace is there for Europeans,” he insisted.

Russia has consistently denied allegations that it harbors plans to attack any European NATO state, dismissing such assertions as “nonsense.”

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Ex-German vice chancellor warns

mainstream ‘dominance’ could end

Robert Habeck, former economy minister in Olaf Scholz’s cabinet, has told the press he can’t find answers in the system he helped build
Ex-German vice chancellor warns mainstream ‘dominance’ could end











A former German vice chancellor and economy minister has announced he is quitting active politics, warning that if current trends continue, “mainstream party dominance will be over.”

Robert Habeck, a former co-leader of the Green Party has told Germany’s Taz media that he will hand in his Bundestag mandate next Monday. 

“Politically desirable democratic alternatives are not on offer ... A new approach must be found. And I can’t find that within the confines of the system I helped build over the last 20 years,” he said.

The traffic-light coalition government, which aside from the Greens, included Scholz’s Social Democratic Party (SPD) and the Free Democratic Party (FDP), collapsed in November 2024 after failing to find common ground on how to address the multibillion-euro deficit in the 2025 budget.

Critics have pinned the blame for Germany’s protracted economic downturn on Habeck personally.

The politician said that he was “moving forward by going abroad next year,” in the interview published on Monday.

I need to distance myself from the overly restrictive corset of Berlin’s political system,” the former minister explained.

Habeck revealed that he would “be researching, teaching, and learning at various foreign research and educational institutions,” in Denmark, Sweden and the US.

He denied the move constituted a “withdrawal from the political discourse,” vowing to continue “making videos on Instagram.”

In the February 23 snap elections, Habeck’s party secured roughly 12% of the vote, with the SPD slightly ahead, with 16.5% – their worst showing since World War II. The FDP barely cleared the 4.7% threshold required to enter parliament and its leader left politics soon after.

Under the new government, the economic woes have continued unchecked, with Chancellor Merz acknowledging on Saturday that Germany is “not just in a period of economic weakness, we are in a structural crisis.”

Moscow has repeatedly claimed that Berlin’s decision to de-couple from inexpensive Russian energy supplies in the wake of the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in 2022, was self-defeating.

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Thursday, March 13, 2025

Corruption is Everywhere > Saakashvilli sentenced to 9 years in Georgia; Police arrest several in EU-Huawei corruption probe

 

Former Georgia President Mikheil Saakashvili imprisoned for 9 years on embezzlement charges

Former Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili was sentenced to nine years in prison on Wednesday. File photo by Mike Theiler/UPI
Former Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili was sentenced to nine years in prison on Wednesday. File photo by Mike Theiler/UPI | License Photo

March 12 (UPI) -- A court in the Georgian capital, Tbilisi, on Wednesday sentenced the country's former president, Mikheil Saakashvili, to nine years in prison after being convicted of embezzling millions of dollars of public funds for his own use.

The prison term imposed by Tbilisi City Court Judge Badri Kochlamazashvili will run concurrently with a six-year sentence Saakashvili began serving in 2021 for abuse of power.

As the sentence was read out protests erupted among the supporters of the 57-year-old Saakashvili, who served two straight terms as president after coming to power in the so-called Rose Revolution more than two decades ago, alleging it was politically motivated and accusing the judge of being a puppet of the administration of the authoritarian Georgia Dream party.

Special State Guarding Service head, Temur Janashia, who was jointly charged with Saakashvili with misappropriating $3.2 million of public money, was fined $106,000 at the same hearing for a lesser offense of abuse of power.

Both men denied the charges.

The reformist Saakashvili, noted for standing up to Russia, anti-corruption policies, including firing the entire police force, slashing taxes and growing the economy, was arrested during a clandestine visit to Georgia ahead of elections in 2021 eight years after he left the country under a cloud following violent crackdowns on public protests, scandals and allegations of political violence.

Saakashvili is fighting additional ongoing prosecutions, including a charge alleging he crossed the border into Georgia illegally. He returned despite a threat of prison saying he had to come back to "save the country" by helping the opposition United National Movement he founded oust the Georgian Dream party, following 2020 elections UNM claimed were stolen.

European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, France, refuted Saakashvili's claims of political persecution when it looked at his case last year, backing authorities' handling of the matter and saying it was (in) line with legal standards in Europe.

The populist Georgia Dream party has veered sharply to the right in recent year and turned its back on Europe, with which it had been pursuing closer ties, pivoting toward Russia in the wake of its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

The European Union suspended a bid by Georgia to join the 27-member country bloc in July due to concerns over a deteriorating human rights situation in the country and a controversial law forcing NGOs and media operating in Georgia that were wholly or partly Western-funded to register as foreign agents.

Such laws make it difficult for George Soros to operate in Europe. He hates them.




Belgian police arrest several in corruption probe linked to Huawei, European parliament


Europe

Several people were on Thursday arrested in a nationwide sweep in Belgium as part of a corruption probe in which Chinese tech giant Huawei was reported to be suspected of having bribed lawmakers in the European parliament. Arrests have also been made in Portugal, prosecutors said.

Members of the European Parliament take part in a voting session during a plenary session at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, eastern France, on March 12, 2025.
Members of the European Parliament take part in a voting session during a plenary session at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, eastern France, on March 12, 2025. © Frederick Florin, AFP

Belgian federal prosecutors announced Thursday the arrests of several people as part of a corruption probe linked to the European Parliament amid reports in local media that Chinese company Huawei bribed EU lawmakers.

Some 100 federal police officers carried out 21 searches in Brussels, the Flanders and Wallonia regions, and Portugal, the federal prosecutor’s office said.

The suspects were arrested for questioning in “connection with their alleged involvement in active corruption within the European Parliament", prosecutors added. “The offences were allegedly committed by a criminal organisation.”

According to an investigation by Le Soir newspaper and other media, lobbyists working for Chinese telecoms giant Huawei are suspected of bribing current or former European Parliament members to promote the company’s commercial policy in Europe.

Corruption, forgery and use of false documents is believed to have taken place regularly and “very discreetly” from 2021 to the present day, the prosecutors said.

The names and functions of the people involved were not disclosed, but a police source told the AFP news agency that none of those arrested are EU lawmakers.

5G and security risks

Huawei, which makes cellphones and is the biggest maker of networking gear for phone and internet carriers, has been caught in tensions between the United States and China over technology and trade.

Some European nations have followed Washington’s lead and banned Huawei’s equipment from next-generation mobile networks over allegations that it poses a security risk that could help facilitate Chinese spying. The company has repeatedly denied this.

European Commission spokesman Thomas Regnier said the EU’s executive branch had no comment regarding the investigation but underlined security concerns the commission has about Huawei and Europe’s 5G telecoms networks.

“The security of our 5G networks is obviously crucial for our economy,” Regnier told reporters.

“Huawei represents materially higher risks than other 5G suppliers,” he said, adding that EU member states should swiftly “adopt decisions to restrict or to exclude Huawei from their 5G networks".

“A lack of swift action would expose the EU as a whole to a clear risk,” Regnier said.

The federal prosecutor’s office, which did not name Huawei, said the bribes are thought to have been paid out in cash, or in the form of “excessive gifts such as food and travel expenses or regular invitations to football matches”.

Prosecutors believe payments might have been disguised as business expenses and in some cases may have been directed to third parties. They would also look to “detect any evidence of money laundering".

Police seized several documents and objects during the searches. Staff at Huawei’s offices in Brussels declined to comment and turned the lights off inside to avoid photographs taken through the window.

Second EU corruption scandal after ‘Qatargate’

This is the second corruption case targeting the EU Parliament in less than three years.

In December 2022, the legislature was shaken by a corruption scandal in which Qatari officials were accused of bribing EU officials to play down labour rights concerns ahead of the soccer World Cup.

The scandal scarred the reputation of the EU’s only institution comprised of officials elected directly in the 27 member countries. It undermined the assembly’s claim to the moral high ground in its own investigations, such as into allegations of corruption in member country Hungary.

The impact of the scandal is still being felt, with the parliament due to rule soon on whether to lift the immunity of two more lawmakers who were implicated.

According to Follow The Money, an investigative journalism platform, one of the main suspects in the latest probe is 41-year-old Valerio Ottati, a Belgian-Italian lobbyist who joined Huawei in 2019.

Before becoming Huawei’s EU Public Affairs Director, Ottati was an assistant to two Italian MEPs who were both members of a European Parliament group dealing with China policy, Follow the Money reported.

(FRANCE 24 with AP, AFP)


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