Georgian police on Tuesday evening used water cannon, tear gas to disperse demonstrators at a pro-EU protest outside the parliament building in Tbilisi, AFP reporters saw.
If brutish local police were Georgia’s only threat, pro-European protesters might be on solid ground. Speaking to your ...
For the fifth day in a row, Georgians are holding massive protests in the country's capital, Tbilisi. The final straw ...
Thousands of demonstrators in the Georgian capital converged on parliament again on Tuesday. They are venting outrage against ...
Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze on Tuesday agreed to hold talks with two former ministers and an opposition party ...
Georgian Public Defender Levan Ioseliani on Tuesday called on the country’s Interior Minister to “publicly condemn every violent act of police and ensure the implementation of effective measures to ...
Georgia's public ombudsman accused police of torture against protesters opposing the government's decision to halt EU talks.
Anti-government protest in Tbilisi, Georgia Anti-government protesters demonstrate outside the Georgian parliament in Tbilisi ...
Kobakhidze on Monday claimed that the protests were “funded from abroad” and vowed “there will be no revolution in Georgia.” ...
As protesters confronted massed ranks of riot police in front of Georgia's parliament last week, a slightly built woman ...
Irakli Kobakhidze warns opposition leaders and NGOs will be held accountable for mounting antigovernment protests.
Georgia's prime minister on Tuesday threatened to punish his political opponents, accusing them of being behind violence at mass protests, as Tbilisi's top court rejected a key lawsuit to annul the ...