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Georgia’s opposition disputes are the result of a crucial vote that could decide the country’s role in Europe
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Georgia’s opposition disputes are the result of a crucial vote that could decide the country’s role in Europe

TBILISI, Georgia (AP) — Georgia’s opposition contested its election results Saturday after officials said the ruling party led the crucial vote that could decide whether the country pivots to embrace the West or returns to Russia’s orbit.

Many Georgians saw the vote as a favorable referendum on whether to join the European Union. Initial figures suggest turnout is the highest since the ruling Georgian Dream party was first elected in 2012.

Georgia’s Central Election Commission said Georgian Dream won 52.99 percent, with most votes counted. Not all ballots and votes cast by Georgians abroad have been counted, and it is unclear when a final result might be announced.

Georgian Dream was opposed by four main opposition groups, which indicated they did not accept the results. The opposition initially declared victory shortly after the polls closed at 20:00 local time (1600 GMT).

If Georgian Dream’s victory is confirmed, the party will have a parliamentary majority, raising fears about the country’s bid for EU membership. The party has become increasingly authoritarian, passing laws similar to those used by Russia to restrict free speech. After such a law was passed earlier this year, Brussels suspended Georgia’s EU accession process.

Bidzina Ivanishvili, the founder of Georgian Dream, claimed victory almost immediately after the polls closed and said: “It is rare in the world for the same party to achieve such success in such a difficult situation.”

Tina Bokuchava, president of the opposition United National Movement party, accused the CEC of carrying out Ivanishvili’s “dirty order” and said it “stole the victory of the Georgian people and therefore stole the European future”.

She indicated that the opposition will not recognize the results and “will fight like never before to claim our European future”.

Georgian election observers who stationed thousands of people across the country to monitor the vote said there were several violations and the results “did not correspond to the will of the Georgian people”.

The election campaign in the South Caucasus nation of 3.7 million people, which borders Russia, has been dominated by foreign policy and marked by a fierce battle for votes and allegations of a smear campaign.

Some Georgians he complained of intimidation and was pressured to vote for Georgian Dream, while the opposition accused the party of waging a “hybrid war” against its citizens.

The largest opposition party, the United National Movement, said its headquarters were attacked on the day of the vote. Georgian media also reported that two people were hospitalized after being attacked outside polling stations, one in the western city of Zugdidi, the other in Marneuli, a town south of the capital, Tbilisi.

There were also reports of multiple voting irregularities.

A video shared on social media on Saturday also showed a man stuffing ballot papers into a box at a polling station in Marneuli. Georgia’s Interior Ministry said it had launched an investigation, and the Central Election Commission said a criminal case had been opened and all polling station results would be declared invalid.

Before the parliamentary elections Ivanishvili – the shadow billionaire who founded Georgian Dream and made his fortune in Russia – again vowed to ban opposition parties if his party won.

Georgian Dream will hold opposition parties “fully accountable under the full force of the law” for “war crimes” committed against the people of Georgia, Ivanishvili told a pro-government rally in Tbilisi on Wednesday. He did not explain what crimes he believed the opposition had committed.

Many believed the election was the most important vote since Georgia gained independence from the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. Georgian President Salome Zourabichvili described it as an “existential election”.

Georgians want “European integration, they want to move forward and they want policies that will bring us a better, more stable future,” Qristine Tordia, 29, told The Associated Press shortly after the vote in Tbilisi.

About 80 percent of Georgians favor EU membership, according to polls, and the country’s constitution obliges its leaders to pursue membership of that bloc and NATO.

But Brussels has suspended Georgia’s bid to join the EU indefinitely after the ruling party passed a “Russian law” suppression of freedom of expression in June. Many Georgians fear that the Georgian Dream is dragging the country towards authoritarianism and dashing hopes that it could join the EU.

The election “is not just about changing the government, but whether Georgia survives or not because Ivanishvili’s government means Russia,” Nika Gvaramia, the leader of the Coalition for Change, an opposition group, said before polls closed.

Ivanishvili voted on Saturday morning under heavy security. He did not respond when asked by the AP if he wanted to form an alliance with Russia.

He said the election is a choice between a “government that will serve you” or “electing agents of a foreign country who will only fulfill the demands of the foreign country.” Ivanishvili did not indicate which country he was referring to, but before it. election he and his officials claimed that a “World War Party” sought to influence the EU and the US, expand the conflict in Ukraine and force the Georgian Dream from power.

Opposition parties ignored Zourabichvili’s request to unite into a single party, but signed her “charter” to carry out reforms required by the EU for membership.

The ruling and opposition parties have told voters they will pursue EU membership, even though the Georgian Dream laws have put that hope on hold.

At last week’s EU summit, EU leaders said they had “serious concerns about the course of action taken by the Georgian government”.

Georgian Dream was opposed by three coalitions: the Unity National Movement, the Lelo Change Coalition and Strong Georgia.

The Gakharia Party for Georgia, founded by former prime minister Giorgi Gakharia, said it would not enter into an alliance with anyone but would support the opposition to form a government if it won enough votes.

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Associated Press producer Sophiko Megrelidze contributed to this report