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Russia's Georgia, Moldova vote meddling threatens EU paths

Polls closely watched with view to enlargement

Redazione Ansa

(ANSA) - ROME, OCT 30 - Heavily contested parliamentary elections in Georgia, presidential elections and a referendum on European Union membership in Moldova: both countries were closely watched by the EU with an eye to enlargement, but took different turns towards that goal. At the same time, the votes were allegedly stained by Russian interference.
    European Union candidate countries Georgia and Moldova have taken decisive but divergent steps towards EU membership following recent votes marred by accusations of Russian interference.
    On Georgia: Georgia's Central Election Commission (CEC) declared the incumbent conservative nationalist and pro-Russian Georgian Dream party of Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze the winner of the October 26 parliamentary elections - an outcome heavily contested by the opposition as well as by international players such as the European Union and the United States.
    Pro-Western President Salome Zourabichvili accused Moscow of being behind election fraud in Georgia, saying it was part of a "Russian special operation" and Tbilisi's opposition has accused the ruling Georgian Dream party of taking orders from Moscow.
    Following widespread accusations of irregularities and protests against the results, the CEC said on Tuesday it will recount votes in 14 percent of polling stations in Georgia. The authorities "will conduct a recount in five polling stations in each constituency", according to a statement from the commission.
    On Moldova: On October 20, Moldova voted by a wafer-thin majority to enshrine a pro-EU course into the constitution, after a referendum beset with accusations that Russia tried to manipulate the vote. With all the votes counted, 50.46 percent of voters approved the constitutional change.
    On the same day, Moldova held the first round of the presidential election which was won by the pro-Western incumbent Maia Sandu. She garnered 42.3 percent of the vote, compared to 26 percent her main rival Alexandr Stoianoglo secured, a pro-Russian former attorney general. Sandu is expected to face a tough second round of presidential elections in the November 3 vote against Stoianoglo.
    Georgia in political turmoil over disputed elections Georgia's electoral commission declared Georgian Dream the winner of the elections with a vote share of about 54 percent, according to preliminary figures. About 37.8 percent of votes were garnered by a union of four pro-Western opposition alliances.
    The result gave Georgian Dream 89 seats in the 150-member parliament - enough to govern but short of the supermajority it had sought to pass a constitutional ban on all the main opposition parties.
    Tens of thousands protested on Monday evening in the Georgian capital Tbilisi against the victory of the Georgian Dream party, amid calls from the opposition for a re-run under international supervision.
    President Zourabichvili - at loggerheads with the ruling party - told the cheering crowd: "Your votes were stolen, but we will not let anyone steal our future." She claimed that "quite sophisticated" fraudulent schemes were used in the weekend's vote. She earlier declared the election results "illegitimate", alleging election interference by a "Russian special operation".
    She claimed that the same identity cards were used to vote multiple times in different regions, that money was distributed outside polling stations, and that there were violations using electronic voting technology.
    The Kremlin has denied that Russia interfered in the election, saying that European states were the ones to have put pressure on Georgia.
    The dominant figure, founder and leader of the Georgian Dream party is billionaire Bidzina Ivanishvili, who made his fortune in Moscow, and favours reconciliation with Russia and cooperation with China. Ivanishvili is highly critical of the West.
    EU criticises irregularities and Russian meddling European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen called for an independent probe into "irregularities" in Georgia's election, insisting that Georgians had a "right to know what happened".
    The EU and the United States have called on Tbilisi to open investigations into the allegations of irregularities.
    Ministers from 13 European Union countries also condemned the "violation of international norms" in Georgia's contested parliamentary elections, labelling them "incompatible with the standards expected from a candidate" to the EU.
    European Council President Charles Michel also called on the electoral commission and relevant authorities to "swiftly, transparently and independently investigate and adjudicate electoral irregularities and allegations thereof" in a post on X.
    Michel said he would put Georgia on the agenda of the informal EU summit in Budapest scheduled for November 8.
    Georgian Dream has for months been accused by the opposition of steering Tbilisi away from its goal of joining the EU and back into Russia's orbit.
    The former Soviet republic on Russia's southern border has been a candidate for EU membership since December 2023. However, Brussels has put accession talks on hold because of several repressive laws that the Georgian Dream has pushed through this year.
    Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze on Monday tried to ease the tense political situation in the country by reassuring voters that the country remained committed to the EU. Georgia wants to fully integrate into the bloc by 2030, he said at a government meeting in Tbilisi.
    Hungary's leader Viktor Orbán, a dissenting voice within the European Union who has retained close ties to Moscow, had rushed to congratulate Georgian Dream for an "overwhelming victory" after one exit poll showed the government in the lead and before preliminary results had been published. (ANSA).
   

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