Zürcher Nachrichten - Salome Zurabishvili: outgoing Georgian leader defying the government

EUR -
AED 3.82197
AFN 73.055386
ALL 97.709091
AMD 412.64735
ANG 1.874159
AOA 948.99661
ARS 1072.803548
AUD 1.673475
AWG 1.87302
AZN 1.774947
BAM 1.946617
BBD 2.099695
BDT 124.273187
BGN 1.957675
BHD 0.39231
BIF 3075.193828
BMD 1.040566
BND 1.40975
BOB 7.212083
BRL 6.430076
BSD 1.039895
BTN 88.957374
BWP 14.483678
BYN 3.403147
BYR 20395.103094
BZD 2.088847
CAD 1.493291
CDF 2986.425707
CHF 0.939954
CLF 0.037479
CLP 1034.167201
CNY 7.595198
CNH 7.634657
COP 4583.612118
CRC 529.701316
CUC 1.040566
CUP 27.575012
CVE 109.74678
CZK 25.169845
DJF 184.929485
DKK 7.458049
DOP 63.321303
DZD 141.259998
EGP 52.898865
ERN 15.608497
ETB 132.828925
FJD 2.41609
FKP 0.82411
GBP 0.829253
GEL 2.923604
GGP 0.82411
GHS 15.287109
GIP 0.82411
GMD 74.920677
GNF 8988.556377
GTQ 8.018177
GYD 217.566839
HKD 8.07849
HNL 26.421366
HRK 7.463886
HTG 135.88899
HUF 411.319276
IDR 16878.768802
ILS 3.802516
IMP 0.82411
INR 89.266921
IQD 1362.27394
IRR 43794.835752
ISK 143.899504
JEP 0.82411
JMD 161.865676
JOD 0.737967
JPY 163.372029
KES 134.410287
KGS 90.529075
KHR 4184.322213
KMF 485.034069
KPW 936.509254
KRW 1529.820254
KWD 0.320477
KYD 0.866624
KZT 545.70582
LAK 22730.775361
LBP 93127.843787
LKR 304.165205
LRD 190.302314
LSL 19.506286
LTL 3.072522
LVL 0.629428
LYD 5.109871
MAD 10.498626
MDL 19.134018
MGA 4856.093046
MKD 61.52834
MMK 3379.719351
MNT 3535.844779
MOP 8.312608
MRU 41.428377
MUR 48.896409
MVR 16.021133
MWK 1803.19405
MXN 21.484782
MYR 4.646095
MZN 66.496079
NAD 19.506286
NGN 1608.715894
NIO 38.269477
NOK 11.792355
NPR 142.331599
NZD 1.845268
OMR 0.400636
PAB 1.039895
PEN 3.897515
PGK 4.224054
PHP 60.556806
PKR 289.584684
PLN 4.276738
PYG 8127.660548
QAR 3.792592
RON 4.974531
RSD 116.985605
RUB 114.980612
RWF 1442.872942
SAR 3.909189
SBD 8.723646
SCR 14.817947
SDG 625.898863
SEK 11.476559
SGD 1.414556
SHP 0.82411
SLE 23.7222
SLL 21820.162046
SOS 594.29661
SRD 36.70496
STD 21537.625332
SVC 9.099035
SYP 2614.454762
SZL 19.491058
THB 35.547317
TJS 11.334669
TMT 3.652388
TND 3.302621
TOP 2.437115
TRY 36.762699
TTD 7.067661
TWD 34.153453
TZS 2544.185321
UAH 43.762953
UGX 3819.980552
USD 1.040566
UYU 45.61461
UZS 13419.633
VES 54.069867
VND 26518.836855
VUV 123.538137
WST 2.874864
XAF 652.877275
XAG 0.036039
XAU 0.000397
XCD 2.812183
XDR 0.797339
XOF 652.874153
XPF 119.331742
YER 260.531821
ZAR 19.54661
ZMK 9366.349755
ZMW 28.961385
ZWL 335.061983
  • CMSC

    -0.0128

    22.93

    -0.06%

  • NGG

    0.2100

    59.42

    +0.35%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    12.13

    +0.41%

  • SCS

    0.1200

    11.82

    +1.02%

  • RBGPF

    59.0200

    59.02

    +100%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0300

    7.05

    -0.43%

  • BCC

    0.0700

    118.86

    +0.06%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    23.13

    -0.3%

  • RELX

    0.0200

    45.42

    +0.04%

  • RIO

    0.2200

    58.81

    +0.37%

  • GSK

    0.1700

    33.82

    +0.5%

  • BTI

    0.2600

    36.32

    +0.72%

  • BCE

    0.6500

    23.18

    +2.8%

  • VOD

    0.0700

    8.49

    +0.82%

  • BP

    0.4700

    29.56

    +1.59%

  • AZN

    -0.0500

    65.52

    -0.08%

Salome Zurabishvili: outgoing Georgian leader defying the government
Salome Zurabishvili: outgoing Georgian leader defying the government / Photo: Giorgi ARJEVANIDZE - AFP

Salome Zurabishvili: outgoing Georgian leader defying the government

Salome Zurabishvili has vowed to stay on as the president of Georgia, becoming an icon to thousands of pro-EU protesters during a bitter political showdown and decrying a new party loyalist's inauguration to the presidency as "illegitimate."

Text size:

The 72-year-old has taken a central role in Georgia's crisis, having vowed not to stand down when her mandate ends Sunday, unless the ruling Georgian Dream party holds a re-run of October elections that she says were rigged.

"I remain the only legitimate president," she told supporters Sunday.

"I will leave the presidential palace and stand with you, carrying with me the legitimacy, the flag and your trust."

Zurabishvili was a French diplomat before entering the turbulent politics of her ancestral homeland.

Born in Paris to a Georgian family who fled Bolshevik rule in the 1920s, she has accused the government of steering Tbilisi back towards Moscow and acting on Russian orders.

Elected as Georgia's first woman leader in 2018, she became in recent months the beacon of Tbilisi's EU aspirations -- in a fierce feud with the ruling Georgian Dream party and backing massive anti-government protests.

"We are witnesses and victims of a Russian special operation, a modern form of hybrid war against the Georgian people," she declared after contested parliamentary elections in October.

- 'Our president' -

For tens of thousands of protesters, Zurabishvili represents hope against an increasingly repressive government that has adopted a series of Kremlin-style laws.

She has vowed to stand by pro-EU protesters staging daily mass rallies since November 28, when Georgian Dream made its shock announcement that it will shelve EU accession talks until 2028.

On December 14, an electoral college controlled by the ruling party installed its loyalist, far-right former footballer Mikheil Kavelashvili, as the country's next figurehead leader.

But Zurabishvili, whose mandate was meant to end on Sunday with the new leader's inauguration, has refused to step down until the government organises fresh parliamentary elections.

"There is only one formula to resolve such a crisis, one universally recognised in every democratic country: new elections," she said last week.

While she has now vacated the presidential premises in Tbilisi, she has vowed to fight on against Georgian Dream and many protesters see her as the real president of Georgian.

"She still remains our president," 34-year-old software engineer Giorgi Mamatelashvili told AFP as he came to support Zurabishvili on Sunday.

Refusing to recognise Kavelashvili's legitimacy, opposition parties have said Zurabishvili remains the country's "only legitimate leader".

- Pro-EU -

Moving Tbilisi closer to Europe has been a lifelong goal for Zurabishvili, who was not always at war with Georgian Dream.

She was elected with the support of billionaire Bidzina Ivanishvili, Georgia's most powerful man and the ruling party's founder.

Georgians backed Zurabishvili in the polls despite her outsider status and mistakes when speaking Georgian.

"It is now important to show that this country has chosen Europe," she declared after she was first elected.

"For that purpose, Georgians have elected a European woman as president."

But when the government began deviating from its pro-EU path in 2022, Zurabishvili turned into Georgian Dream's most outspoken critic.

She has vetoed several controversial laws targeting civil society, independent media, and LGBTQ rights -- all of which Brussels warned would undermine Georgia's prospects of joining the EU.

Infuriated Georgian Dream lawmakers have twice failed to impeach her.

- 'Superwoman' -

Fighting Russian influence in Georgia is in Zurabishvili's blood.

She is a descendant of Niko Nikoladze, a prominent writer who called for Georgia's independence from the Russian Empire.

Zurabishvili had a 30-year career in French diplomacy, with postings at the United Nations, Washington and Chad, before serving as France's ambassador to Tbilisi.

After the bloodless 2003 "Rose Revolution", Georgia's reformist then-president Mikheil Saakashvili -- now in prison -- appointed her as foreign minister, approving the move first with Jacques Chirac, France's president at the time.

But she quickly fell out with Saakashvili's camp, accusing it of democratic backsliding.

Thousands took to the streets to protest against her dismissal in 2005, chanting: "You are our superwoman!"

In her 2006 book "A Woman for Two Countries", she wrote: "Now, I have to engage in a political battle, which has never attracted me, which I never practised, which is being imposed on me."

B.Brunner--NZN