In Georgia, Generation Z leads the protest

In a trendy café in Tbilisi, Tekla Jaïlava serves her last customers before joining for a third night in a row a demonstration against the law on “foreign influence”, perceived by her generation of Georgians as liberticidal.

At 21, she grew up in the 2010s in a country, Georgia, which loudly displayed its thirst for Western-style democracy and its ambitions for the European Union and NATO. Especially since the former Soviet republic was bruised by the lost war of 2008 against its former overlord, Russia.

Like a large part of Generation Z, which includes those who grew up in the 2000s and 2010s, Tekla says he is resolutely anti-Kremlin. It was therefore with anger that she welcomed the decision of the ruling party, Georgian Dream, to reactivate its bill on “foreign influence”, which the government had abandoned a year earlier in the face of a first wave of massive demonstrations.

Because this text is reminiscent of that on “foreign agents” adopted in Russia to repress NGOs and media accused of serving the interests of the West.

For Tekla Jaïlava, seeing Georgia – the scene of a pro-Western revolution in 2003 – following this model is all the more unacceptable as it saw an influx of thousands of Russians in 2022 fleeing repression after the invasion of Ukraine. “Since my childhood, we have always looked towards Europe,” she told AFP. “My upbringing, the way my brain organizes things, all of this is opposed to everything Russian. »

“This law is stealing my future”

For the young woman and tens of thousands of other demonstrators, the government is stealing their European dream.

The EU has already said that the adoption of this law would undermine Tbilisi’s aspirations, especially since the authorities resurrected the text just four months after the 27 had granted Georgia the coveted candidate status.

The authorities remain deaf to the protests, while legislative elections are scheduled for October. And they launched a campaign in the media denouncing NGOs deemed disloyal, while at the same time, critics of the government saw their homes vandalized by posters proclaiming them “foreign agents”.

“We can clearly see that they are trying to scare people with these good old methods [d’intimidation] », annoys Tekla Jaïlava. But, she says, this “won’t work” for members of Generation Z, used to freedoms and respect for their rights. “The youth of Georgia have made their choice, we have said loud and clear where we want to go: the European Union,” insists another activist, Ana Tavadze, who, at 26, is one of the oldest demonstrators .

She accuses billionaire Bidzina Ivanishvili, who made his fortune in Russia and controls the Georgian Dream party, of “threatening” this European future.

In the crowd, the youth of the protesters on Roustaveli Avenue stands out. Some still have almost baby-like faces, their bodies draped in Georgian or European flags. “This law is stealing my future,” one of them, Anano Plievi, 19, raged near Parliament.

Spontaneous mobilization

If the country’s president, Salomé Zourabichvili, pro-European and in open conflict with Georgian Dream, has sworn to veto the text, the ruling party claims to have the votes in the assembly to override it.

The protest movement which has lasted for more than a month will continue, swear the demonstrators, who say they are proud of this largely spontaneous, somewhat chaotic mobilization, often at night – and above all without any real leader. “We just want to continue, put pressure on,” says Ana Maïssouradzé, 23.

Visibly annoyed by the enthusiasm of these young people, Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidzé, 45, lost his temper on Facebook in early May, presenting the young people as a violent cohort and accusing the opposition party United National Movement of “financing the movement of Generation Z. Accusations considered laughable by the demonstrators who were mostly children when this party left power 12 years ago and who are still weighed down by their unpopularity. And when opposition leaders wanted to intervene in front of the crowd on Tuesday, they were whistled at.

“We do not coordinate with opposition parties,” insists Louka Beraïa, 24, one of the most prominent figures among the students. But he hopes that this movement can be structured to allow the defeat of the Georgian Dream in the legislative elections in October.

In the meantime, Tekla Jaïlava remains determined and will continue to take to the streets “as long as it takes”.

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