Terje Helland Profile picture
Mar 12 22 tweets 5 min read Read on X
🇬🇪The OSCE’s Moscow Mechanism report on Georgia is out.
It is one of the most serious international assessments of the country’s democratic trajectory in years.
Here are the key findings policymakers should understand ⬇️
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The report concludes that Georgia has undergone marked democratic backsliding since spring 2024.
2/21
It identifies a pattern that includes:
🔹violence against protesters and journalists
🔹impunity for perpetrators
🔹restrictive laws targeting civil society and media
🔹prosecutions against opposition leaders
🔹shrinking political pluralism.
3/21
2024 parliamentary elections, the report highlights serious concerns raised by international observers:
🔹pressure on voters, especially public sector employees
🔹voter tracking practices
🔹compromised ballot secrecy
🔹unequal campaign conditions
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These issues cast doubt on whether the process fully reflected voters’ will.
5/21
The report also raises concerns about the 2025 local elections.
They were held in an environment already shaped by repression, with some opposition parties boycotting and limited election observation after Georgia failed to invite a full monitoring mission in time.
6/21
A major focus of the report is legislation targeting civil society.
It calls for repeal of laws such as:
🔹the “Transparency of Foreign Influence” law
🔹the new “foreign agents” framework (FARA)
🔹restrictions on foreign grants.
7/21
According to the rapporteur, these laws stigmatize NGOs, discourage donors, and weaken independent oversight of government power.
8/21
The report notes that Georgian officials and pro-government media routinely portray critics as “traitors,” “foreign agents,” “enemies of the state,” or part of a so-called “Global War Party.”
This rhetoric is part of a broader campaign to intimidate and stigmatize dissent.
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Media freedom is another major concern.
Restrictions on funding, combined with intimidation and attacks on journalists, have created what the report describes as a hostile environment for critical reporting.
10/21
One of the most serious sections concerns the policing of protests.
The report documents allegations of:
🔹beatings during arrest and detention
🔹rubber bullets fired at close range
🔹tear gas in confined spaces
🔹degrading treatment of detainees.
11/21 Image
Some of these cases, the report warns, may amount to torture or ill-treatment under international law if confirmed by investigations.
12/21
Equally troubling is impunity.
Investigations into police violence and attacks on protesters and journalists have been slow or ineffective, raising serious concerns about accountability.
13/21Image
The report also describes attacks by unidentified groups targeting activists, journalists and opposition figures.
Even where coordination with authorities cannot be proven, the lack of effective investigations is deeply concerning.
14/21
Another major issue is the campaign against the opposition.
The report highlights criminal cases against opposition leaders and attempts to ban major opposition parties.
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According to the rapporteur, these developments threaten political pluralism itself, a core element of democratic governance.
16/21
The report also raises concerns about judicial independence.
Issues include concentration of power in judicial governance bodies and procedural problems in politically sensitive cases.
17/21
The recommendations are clear:
🔹repeal restrictive laws targeting NGOs and media
🔹end politically motivated prosecutions
🔹investigate police violence
🔹restore judicial independence.
18/21
It also calls on OSCE states and the international community to maintain scrutiny and consider further measures, including sanctions and expanded monitoring.
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The OSCE report does not describe isolated incidents.
It describes a systemic dismantling of democratic safeguards.
Georgia is moving away from pluralistic democracy toward a managed authoritarian system - a trajectory that increasingly resembles a slide toward dictatorship.
/21Image
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21/21buymeacoffee.com/terjehelland
Source:
"Report on developments in Georgia in respect of human rights and fundamental freedoms since Spring 2024"
odihr.osce.org/odihr/662725

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More from @terjehelland

Feb 27
🇬🇪🇬🇧Breaking: The “Political Council” of Georgian Dream has decided that when the UK sanctions two propaganda outlets, the appropriate response is an unhinged attack on its pro-Western political opponents.
1/9Image
Nothing screams “independent journalism” like a ruling party issuing theological manifestos about why its favorite TV channels are sacred vessels of truth.
2/9
Read 9 tweets
Feb 10
🇬🇪Georgia has entered a new phase of political repression. A mass “Opposition Silencing Trial” is now underway in Tbilisi, targeting leading opposition figures in a single, collective prosecution that Georgian Dream brands as a “sabotage case.”
1/10 Image
The so-called evidence reportedly consists of public speeches, protest activity and media appearances. In other words, lawful political activity reframed as a criminal conspiracy. Potential sentences reach 15 years.
2/10Image
Those on trial are Mikheil Saakashvili, Giorgi Vashadze, Nika Gvaramia, Nika Melia, Zurab Japaridze, Elene Khoshtaria, Mamuka Khazaradze, and Badri Japaridze. Different parties.
Different political roles.
One courtroom. One message: opposition itself is the crime.
3/10 Image
Read 10 tweets
Feb 1
🇬🇪Georgia is sliding into a legal dictatorship. Not overnight. Step by step. Each protest is met with a new tailored law.
Each law designed to exhaust, criminalize, and isolate society until resistance itself becomes illegal.
Here is how the latest law changes everything.
1/11 Image
Step one: the so-called “Russian law.” Sold as transparency. In reality, a stigma law targeting civil society and media. Georgians protested in massive numbers. The government learned protest alone would not stop it.
2/11Image
Step two: halting EU accession talks. A strategic break with Europe, framed as “sovereignty.”
Georgians protested again. The message from society was clear: Europe is the choice, not isolation.
3/11Image
Read 12 tweets
Jan 28
🇬🇪Georgian Dream is Europe’s most un-democratic and human rights-violating force currently in power.
Today, they announced new amendments to the "Law on Grants" that criminalize receiving foreign support, restrict political participation, and outlaw core democratic activity
1/12Image
Image
Georgian Dream is doing this for one simple reason: it works. Every previous authoritarian law has been met only with Western “concern,” “worry,” and polite “urges to reconsider.”
No consequences. No costs.
GD feel absolute power and they use it to crush all opposition.
2/12 Image
They can do it because EU and US politicians are not reacting. Silence has become permission. Each non-response signals that the next anti democratic escalation will also be met with no reactions.
3/12
civil.ge/archives/719193
Read 12 tweets
Jan 23
🇬🇪Georgia and Georgian Dream is emerging as a key enabler of Russia’s sanctioned shadow fleet.
New reporting by Finland’s YLE reveals how Georgia-registered companies are keeping Russian oil tankers operational despite EU sanctions.
1/11Image
At the center is Arnika Trade LLC, a company registered in Tbilisi, identified as a key intermediary supplying spare parts for Finnish Wärtsilä engines used on Russian tankers under sanctions.
2/11Image
These are not old contracts or accidental spillovers.
The reporting documents systematic deliveries from 2023–2025, routed via third countries specifically to evade EU and Western export controls.
3/11
Read 12 tweets
Jan 19
🇬🇪🇮🇷Georgia is strategically very important to the Iranian regime.
Not marginal. Not incidental.
Under Georgian Dream, Georgia has become a country Iran actively relies on to move money, goods, and political influence.
1/11Image
That importance did not emerge by accident. It grew as Georgian Dream steadily lowered political, diplomatic, and economic barriers between Tbilisi and Tehran, even as Iran faced deeper international isolation.
2/11 Image
In 2024 alone, Georgia’s prime minister @PM_Kobakhidze made two official visits to Iran. These were not routine diplomatic exchanges. They occurred at moments when most Western-aligned governments were deliberately keeping distance.
3/11 Image
Read 12 tweets

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