The West is trying to install a government loyal to it in Tbilisi, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said at a Nov. 21 briefing.
“When you talk about alleged Russian interference, this is a situation where the thief’s hat is on fire. “They do it to cover up their own crimes.” – said Zakharova.
He rejected accusations of Russian interference in Georgia’s internal affairs and expressed confidence that the Georgian people will be able to “defend their identity.”
On October 26, in the parliamentary elections, the ruling Georgian Dream party won 53.93% of the votes and won 89 seats out of 150 in parliament. Four opposition parties also entered Parliament, but do not recognize the electoral results and reject their seats. The first meeting of parliament is scheduled for November 25. “Dream” has enough mandates to start working without opposition parties, and the party intends to do so. The opposition, in turn, plans to continue protests that day.