Georgia Jails Opposition Figure Who Urged ‘Peaceful Revolution’ for 2-1/2 Years

TBILISI, May 21 (Reuters) – A court in ⁠Georgia ⁠sentenced a senior opposition ⁠figure to 2-1/2 years in prison on Thursday ​on charges of sabotage and inciting a coup at local elections last ‌year, the Interpress news agency ‌reported.

Levan Khabeishvili, a former chair of the United National Movement (UNM), ⁠one ⁠of the South Caucasus country’s largest opposition groups, was arrested ​last September after he repeatedly urged Georgians to take to the streets in a “peaceful revolution” on the day of municipal elections.

Khabeishvili has rejected the ​charges against him, according to Georgian media.

The governing Georgian Dream party, ⁠in ⁠power since 2012, swept ⁠the ​municipal elections on October 4 last year. The two largest opposition blocs, ​including the UNM, ⁠boycotted the vote in line with a wider standoff with the government.

Georgians have protested nightly since November 2024, when the government announced it was freezing accession talks to the European Union.

Georgian riot police ⁠used pepper spray and water cannons to disperse demonstrators on election ⁠night after some protesters tried to force entry to the presidential palace in the capital Tbilisi.

Ten people, including a prominent Georgian opera singer, were sentenced to lengthy prison terms this month in connection with those protests. Government critics say the sentences were part of a broader pattern of attempts by Georgian Dream to silence opposition voices as Georgia takes ⁠what they see as an anti-Western U-turn to an authoritarian, pro-Russian path.

The government denies its policies are authoritarian and accuses opposition parties – several of which it is seeking to ban ​outright – of trying to foment violent coups.

(Reporting by Lucy ​Papachristou, Editing by Timothy Heritage)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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