In Georgia, parliamentary committee overrides president's veto of law critics say violates constitution

28 May
Parliament of Georgia (photo credit: cinto2 via flickr)
Parliament of Georgia (photo credit: cinto2 via flickr)
The Georgian Parliament’s Legal Committee has overridden President Salome Zurabishvili's veto on the controversial “foreign agents” bill, News.Az reports citing Georgian media. The bill envisages the creation of a register for foreign-funded non-governmental organizations and media outlets, requiring them to submit declarations. President Zurabishvili, in her veto remarks, asserted that the bill should not be subject to amendments, and proposed an article stating that the law would lose force one day after coming into effect. The ruling Georgian Dream party accused the president of stifling discussion and preventing any possibility of modifications, leading to the veto's override. “You will not force me to move to a substantive, article-by-article consideration of the law... The whole law is unacceptable and it should be canceled,” Presidential Parliamentary Secretary Giorgi Mskhiladze stated at the meeting. Mskhiladze argued that the draft law contradicts four articles of the constitution: “Right to Associations” (Article 22), “Rights to inviolability of personal and family life, personal space and communication” (Article 15), “Right to Equality” (Article 11), and “Integration into European and Euro-Atlantic” (Article 78). He warned that if adopted, non-governmental organizations and media would be endangered.
Read the full article here: News.AZ

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