🎉 my new portfolio website: https://t.co/pZJ62EKH4I
Years of reporting on democratic backsliding, Kremlin-style laws on “foreign agents”, “gay propaganda,” and regional shifts since the Ukraine invasion.
Independent journalism in Georgia matters. I’m open to collaborations.
I feel like there are a lot of as-yet-unknown twists to this story - one to keep an eye on.
Russian activist held in Poland admits he worked as FSB agent, court papers say
https://t.co/sR6EPC65RZ
I feel like there are a lot of as-yet-unknown twists to this story - one to keep an eye on.
Russian activist held in Poland admits he worked as FSB agent, court papers say
https://t.co/sR6EPC65RZ
#Georgien. Die zu vielen Augen von Tblisi. Von Tornike Mandaria @Tokmando
In der georgischen Hauptstadt kommt eine beängstigende Überwachungstechnik zum Einsatz. Sie dokumentiert nicht nur, wer auf eine Demonstration geht. @tazgezwitscher https://t.co/KgOLcFLQVq
Currently journalists are protected from being punished solely for refusing to reveal a source. The new bill removes that protection. Meaning if a journalist declines to name a source, it could be enough to lose the case — even if the information is accurate.
Also, Georgia recently withdrew its support for its own candidate, Zurab Pololikashvili, the Secretary-General of the UN World Tourism Organization, in favor of the UAE’s nominee.
Georgian oligarch Bidzina Ivanishvili’s former money man, Giorgi Bachiashvili, says he was abducted in the UAE on May 24—blindfolded and put on a plane to Georgia with no legal process. 1/4
Bachiashvili's friends told The Guardian he was in Abu Dhabi to meet a lawyer when he was taken from a hotel lobby by eight local officers, then transferred to Dubai, and flown to Georgia. 4/4
On Tuesday night I was barred from entering Georgia, my home for the last three years. Official reasons were given as “other,” but from the circumstances surrounding my departure in April it’s clear the refusal is in fact directly tied to my work covering the country as a journalist. 1/
https://t.co/HGzIrMqdMw
Fagatta fled to Germany for safety as a queer person. Now, as queer rights erode in Georgia, they face deportation. Written during my IJP fellowship at Germany's leading paper @SZ.
https://t.co/iiM87d0ExT
📽️ How much have the US and others given in aid to Ukraine? Who's been the most generous? How does it all compare with previous conflicts?
And what's with Donald Trump's money-for-minerals deal?
All the answers in my primer, this time with bonus extra charts 🤓
If you're going to have an argument about Ukraine on here or on TV please read this ISW factsheet first.
- Zelensky does not imminently risk losing all of Ukraine. At the current rate of advance, it would take Russian forces over 83 years to capture the whole of Ukraine.
- Ukraine has not suffered millions of losses. US officials have placed the number of Ukrainian military losses between 60,000 and 70,000, but no reputable source places casualty estimates in the millions. The UN confirmed that Russia had killed over 12,000 Ukrainian civilians.
- Europe provides about as much direct aid to Ukraine as the United States. Europe has provided and pledged approximately $204.1 billion in all, which is actually slightly more than the US.
- Ukraine did not misuse or lose half of the aid the United States has provided. The majority of the funds the United States has allocated for Ukraine stays in the United States to fund domestic defense industrial base and replenish US stockpiles.
https://t.co/g66tjfbAnA
This struggle isn’t new. Earlier this year, our podcast Silenced explored Georgia’s protests and the battle for democracy with @Tokmando.
🎧Listen on Spotify and Apple podcasts: https://t.co/JuScfEGHhF
https://t.co/ZkxhjP8d8s
Several dozen GD "titushkas" stormed the office of the "Akhali" party, physically assaulting people. Among those attacked was TV Pirveli's cameraman, Giorgi Shetsiruli. Notably, there are no special forces present at the rally today—only violent groups in black.
10:25