Georgia postpones EU membership bid until 2028
Georgia has postponed its bid to join the EU after the European Parliament voted to reject the results of the countryâs recent election.
Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze accused the bloc of âblackmailâ and said his government would drop its pursuit of membership âuntil the end of 2028â.
It came hours after European legislators called for last monthâs parliamentary elections in Georgia to be re-run, citing âsignificant irregularitiesâ.
Kobakhidzeâs announcement sparked protests in cities across Georgia, with thousands gathering outside the parliament building in capital Tbilisi, blocking traffic and waving EU flags.
Since 2012, Georgia has been governed by the Georgian Dream party, which critics have accused of trying to move the country away from the EU and closer to Russia.
The party claimed victory in last monthâs election, but opposition MPs are boycotting the new parliament, alleging fraud, while the countryâs President, Salome Zurabishvili, has called the vote âunconstitutionalâ.
On Thursday, the European Parliament backed a resolution describing the election as the latest stage in Georgiaâs âworsening democratic crisisâ and saying that the ruling party was âfully responsibleâ.
It expressed particular concern about reports of vote buying and manipulation, voter intimidation and harassment of observers.
Following the resolution, Kobakhidze said his government had âdecided not to bring up the issue of joining the European Union on the agenda until the end of 2028â.
Georgia has had official EU candidate status since 2023, though Brussels had already halted the accession process earlier this year over a Russia-style law targeting organisations accused of âpursuing the interests of a foreign powerâ.
Kobakhidze said Georgia would continue to implement the reforms required for accession and that it still planned to join by 2030, but added that it was âcrucial for the EU to respect our national interests and traditional valuesâ.
Former Georgian President Giorgi Margvelashvili told the BBC the country was at an âunprecedentedâ turning point.
âSince we were independent 30 years ago, we were clearly pro-western, we were clearly pro-Nato and clearly pro-EU and this was uniting any government that was in place.
âBut in this case, we see that there is a co-ordinated, I would say operation, which is co-ordinated by the bunch of people who are controlling power in Tbilisi and the Kremlin to basically bring Georgia as fast as this is possible to Russian orbit.â
A tense stand-off between protesters and riot police continued through the night in Tbilisi on Thursday.
Demonstrators set up barricades in the streets, while police used pepper spray and water cannon on the crowds.
âGeorgian Dream didnât win the elections. It staged a coup,â said 20-year-old Shota Sabashvili.
âThere is no legitimate parliament or government in Georgia. We will not let this self-proclaimed prime minister destroy our European future.â
Ana, a student, said Georgian Dream was âgoing against Georgian peopleâs will and want to drag us back to USSRâ
âThat will never happen because Georgian people will never let this happen,â she told the Associated Press.