The President of Georgia Salome Zurabishvili discussed the situation in the republic by phone with the new the head of the European Council, Antonio Costa, and the European Commissioner for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, Kaya Kalas, reported from the administration of the Georgian leader.
The two replaced Charles Michel and Josep Borrell.
In Tbilisi, special forces used water cannons against protesters in a side street near the parliament of the republic, reported a correspondent of RIA Novosti.
As of 9:40 p.m., there were no clashes between the security forces and the protesters.
The rally in front of the highest legislative body started in the evening. The participants in it hit the metal fence and threw firecrackers at the building, targeting the windows. Later, special forces soldiers climbed the outer wall and began pushing back the demonstrators with water cannons.
Several thousand people came out on Rustaveli Boulevard in front of the parliament demanding the resignation of the government and the calling of new parliamentary elections. The number of protesters is significantly less than the previous days.
On November 28, a new wave of anti-government demonstrations began in Georgia. The reason for the protest was a statement by Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze. He said that the ruling party "Georgian Dream - Democratic Georgia" has decided not to include in the agenda the issue of negotiations for accession to the European Union until the end of 2028. and refuse all budgetary subsidies from the community. According to the head of the government, the reasons for this are constant blackmail from the EU regarding the initiation of a dialogue on joining it, requests to cancel a number of laws passed by the parliament, and calls to impose sanctions on the Georgian authorities.