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Georgia–European Union relations

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article is about bilateral relations. For the broad perspective on the accession negotiations between the European Union and Georgia, seeAccession of Georgia to the European Union.
Bilateral relations
Georgia–European Union relations
Map indicating locations of European Union and Georgia

European Union

Georgia
Diplomatic mission
European Union Delegation, TbilisiMission of Georgia, Brussels
flagGeorgia portal

The formerEuropean Community andGeorgia established relations in 1992. After theMaastricht Treaty on creation of theEuropean Union, Georgia deepened its ties with theEU through a Partnership and Cooperation Agreement (PCA) signed in 1996.[1][2] In 2006, a five-year "Action Plan" of rapprochement was implemented in the context of theEuropean Neighbourhood Policy (ENP). In 2009, relations between the two were further upgraded under the auspices ofEastern Partnership. In 2016, a comprehensiveAssociation Agreement between the EU and Georgia went into force, providing Georgian citizens with visa-free travel to the EU, as well as access to some sectors of theEuropean Single Market. FollowingBrexit, most of the existing EU-Georgia agreements applicable to theUnited Kingdom were renegotiated and agreed upon in 2019bilaterally with the United Kingdom.

Georgia is acandidate for EU membership. AEuropean Union Monitoring Mission in Georgia has been operating since 2009. In January 2021, Georgia was preparing to formally apply for EU membership in 2024.[3][4] However, on 3 March 2022, Georgia submitted its membership application ahead of schedule, following theRussian invasion of Ukraine.[5] In December 2023, the EU officially granted candidate status to Georgia. This made Georgia the first country in theSouth Caucasus region to obtain EU candidacy status.[6]

In April 2023, a nationwide poll by theInternational Republican Institute found that 89 percent of Georgians support joining the EU, the highest number recorded for years.[7]

History

[edit]

Early developments

[edit]

TheEuropean Community andGeorgia established relations in 1992.[citation needed]

TheEuropean Council'sRegulation (EC) No 1975/95 of 4 August 1995 provided forfood aid to be sent to the people of Georgia.[8]

Adjara crisis (2004)

[edit]
Further information:2004 Adjara crisis

InAdjara, leaderAslan Abashidze was forced to resign in May 2004 following theRose Revolution.EU CFSP ChiefJavier Solana indicated in February 2007 that the EU could send troops to Georgia alongside Russian forces.[9]

South Ossetia crisis (2006–08)

[edit]
The EUMM patrols the South Ossetian administration boundary line in armored SUVs in February 2012.

In July 2006 the European Union referred to then-recent developments in theSouth Ossetiazone of conflict and to the Resolution of the Georgian Parliament on Peacekeeping Forces Stationed in the Conflict Zones, which was adopted on 18 July 2006 as follows:

The European Union is deeply concerned about continuing tension between Georgia and Russia and recent incidents in South Ossetia, which do not contribute to stability and freedom of movement. The European Union is particularly worried by the recent closure of the only recognized border crossing between Georgia and the Russian Federation. The European Union emphasises the importance of ensuring freedom of movement of goods and people, in particular by keeping the border crossing at Zemo Larsi open.[10]

After the2008 South Ossetia war an EU cease-fire monitoring mission in Georgia (EUMM Georgia) was sent to monitor theRussian troop withdrawal from "security zones" established by Russia around South Ossetia and Abkhazia.[11] The mission started on 1 October 2008[12] and was extended by the EU in July 2009 for one year while the EU expressed concern that Russia was blocking other observers from working there.[13] AUnited Nations Security Council resolution aimed at extending itsUN Observer Mission in Georgia was vetoed by Russia on 15 June 2009.[14]

European Neighbourhood Policy Action Plan (2006–11)

[edit]

On 2 October 2006, a joint statement on the agreed text of the Georgia-European Union Action Plan within theEuropean Neighbourhood Policy (ENP) was issued. The Action Plan was formally approved at the EU-Georgia Cooperation Council session on 14 November 2006 inBrussels.[15]

Association Agreement (2013–present)

[edit]
President of GeorgiaSalome Zourabichvili, President ofMoldovaMaia Sandu, President ofUkraineVolodymyr Zelenskyy andPresident of the European CouncilCharles Michel during the 2021Batumi International Conference. In 2014, the EU signedAssociation Agreements with all the three states.
Georgian flag in front of theCouncil of Europe

To enhance their relationship, the EU and Georgia began negotiating anAssociation Agreement (AA) and a Deep and Comprehensive Free Trade Agreement.[16] In November 2012,European Commissioner for Neighbourhood and EnlargementStefan Fule stated that the AA negotiations could be finalized by November 2013.[17] In February 2013, Tamar Beruchachvili, the Deputy State Minister for European and Euro-Atlantic Integration of Georgia, stated that Georgia had no plans to join theEurasian Economic Union,[18] which Fulehas warned Ukraine would be incompatible with the agreements with the EU.[19] A ceremony on the initialling of the AA by the Georgian Foreign Minister Maia Panjikidze and EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Catherine Ashton was held at theEastern Partnership summit on 29 November 2013.[20][21] It was formally signed on 27 June 2014,[22] and had to be ratified by the EU,Euratom, their member states and Georgia. A second agreement, governing the country's involvement in EU crisis management operations, was also signed.[23]

The Association Agreement, much of which provisionally came into force in September, has been fully ratified by Georgia and all EU member states.[24] On 18 December 2014 theEuropean Parliament approved the Association Agreement. Members backed the treaty by 490 votes in favour to 76 against, with 57 abstentions.[25] The agreement entered into force on 1 July 2016.[24]

Parliament building in Tbilisi
Georgia-European Union Association Agreement poster in Tbilisi
EU-States which ratified Association Agreement with Georgia

Ratification

[edit]

The EU-Georgia Association Agreement was ratified by legislative bodies of every single EU member state. Detailed ratification timeline and vote counts are outlined in the below collapsible list (click the "show" button to expand the list):

Full ratification timeline
SignatoryDateInstitutionIn FavourAgainstABDeposited[24]Reference
AustriaAustria8 July 2015National CouncilApproved28 August 2015[26]
23 July 2015Federal CouncilApproved[26]
Presidential AssentGranted
Belgium
23 April 2015Chamber of Representatives10117201 February 2016[27][28]
Royal Assent (federal law)
1 July 2015
Walloon
Parliament
(regional)
(community)
6324[29]
6124[29]
22 June 2015German-speaking Community1621[30]
24 June 2015French Community7108[31]
20 November 2015Brussels Regional Parliament6933[32][33]
20 November 2015
Brussels United
Assembly
[34]
(FR language)
(NL language)
5331[35][36]
1402[35][36]
17 June 2015
Flemish
Parliament
(regional)
(community)
8218[37]
8719[37]
24 June 2015COCOF Assembly7108[38][39]
BulgariaBulgaria24 July 2014National Assembly91009 September 2014[40]
28 July 2014Presidential AssentGranted[41]
CroatiaCroatia12 December 2014Parliament1160124 March 2015[42]
18 December 2014Presidential AssentGranted[43]
CyprusCyprus7 May 2015House of RepresentativesApproved18 August 2015[44]
22 May 2015Presidential AssentGranted[45]
Czech RepublicCzech Republic18 March 2015Senate560612 June 2015[46]
29 April 2015Chamber of Deputies116151[46][47]
19 May 2015Presidential AssentGranted[48]
DenmarkDenmark18 December 2014Parliament1017018 February 2015[49]
EstoniaEstonia4 November 2014Assembly660012 January 2015[50][51]
13 November 2014Presidential AssentGranted[50]
European UnionEuropean Union andEAEC18 December 2014European Parliament490765719 April 2016 (EAEC)
23 May 2016 (EU)
[25]
Council of the European Union
FinlandFinland10 March 2015ParliamentApproved6 May 2015[52]
24 April 2015Presidential AssentGranted[53]
FranceFrance29 October 2015SenateApproved15 December 2015[54]
25 June 2015National AssemblyApproved[54]
9 November 2015Presidential AssentGranted[54]
GermanyGermany8 May 2015BundesratApproved22 July 2015[55]
26 March 2015BundestagApproved[56]
27 May 2015Presidential AssentGranted[57]
Georgia (country)Georgia18 July 2014Parliament1230025 July 2014[58]
Presidential AssentGranted
GreeceGreece18 November 2015ParliamentApproved14 December 2015[59]
24 November 2015Presidential PromulgationGranted[60]
HungaryHungary25 November 2014National Assembly127607 April 2015[61]
5 December 2014Presidential AssentGranted[61]
Republic of IrelandIreland27 January 2015Dáil Éireann5819017 April 2015[62]
ItalyItaly26 November 2015Senate20237103 February 2016[63]
29 July 2015Chamber of Deputies3109334[63]
7 December 2015Presidential AssentGranted[64]
LatviaLatvia14 July 2014Parliament81002 October 2014[65]
18 July 2014Presidential AssentGranted[66]
LithuaniaLithuania8 July 2014Parliament840129 July 2014[67]
11 July 2014Presidential AssentGranted[68]
LuxembourgLuxembourg18 March 2015Chamber of Deputies552012 May 2015[69]
12 April 2015Grand Ducal PromulgationGranted[70]
MaltaMalta21 August 2014House of RepresentativesApproved29 August 2014[71][72][73]
NetherlandsNetherlands7 July 2015SenateAdopted21 September 2015[74]
7 April 2015House of Representatives119310[75]
28 July 2015Royal PromulgationGranted[74]
PolandPoland5 March 2015Senate750022 May 2015[76]
6 February 2015Sejm43901[77][78]
26 March 2015Presidential AssentGranted[79]
PortugalPortugal2 April 2015National AssemblyApproved8 October 2015[80]
19 May 2015Presidential AssentGranted[81]
RomaniaRomania2 July 2014Chamber of Deputies2980014 July 2014[82]
3 July 2014Senate11102[83]
9 July 2014Presidential AssentGranted[84]
SlovakiaSlovakia23 September 2014National Council1170121 October 2014[85]
16 October 2014Presidential AssentGranted[86]
SloveniaSlovenia13 May 2015National Assembly693027 July 2015[87][88]
21 May 2015Presidential AssentGranted[89]
SpainSpain27 May 2015SenateApproved28 July 2015[90]
30 April 2015Congress of Deputies30301[91]
Royal AssentGranted
SwedenSweden26 November 2014Parliament2494409 January 2015[92]
United KingdomUnited Kingdom23 February 2015House of CommonsApproved8 April 2015[93]
9 March 2015House of LordsApproved[94]
19 March 2015Royal AssentGranted[95]

Accession of Georgia to the European Union

[edit]
Main article:Accession of Georgia to the European Union
See also:Potential enlargement of the European Union
President ofGeorgiaSalome Zourabichvili, President ofMoldovaMaia Sandu, President ofUkraineVolodymyr Zelenskyy andPresident of the European CouncilCharles Michel during the 2021Batumi International Conference. In 2014, the EU signedAssociation Agreements with all the three states.
Countries that could join the European Union
  Current members
  Official candidate countries
  Applicant / potential candidate countries
  Potential membership possible (including theUnited Kingdom)
  Countries geographically located (at least partially) inEurope
  Membership not possible (Application rejected by theEuropean Council)

On 12 January 2002, theEuropean Parliament noted that Georgia may enter the EU in the future.[96]The European Parliament passed a resolution in 2014 stating that "in accordance with Article 49 of the Treaty on European Union, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine, as well as any other European country, have a European perspective and can apply for EU membership in compliance with the principles of democracy, respect for fundamental freedoms and human rights, minority rights and ensuring the rule of rights."[97] Membership is welcomed by Georgians, with 77% of the population approving the government's goal to join the EU and only 11% opposing it.[98]

Georgia's former PresidentMikheil Saakashvili has expressed a desire for Georgia to join the EU.[99] This view has been explicitly expressed on several occasions as links to the United States, EU andNATO have been strengthened in an attempt to move away from the Russian sphere of influence.[100] Territorial integrity issues inAjaria were dealt with after theRose Revolution, when leaderAslan Abashidze was forced to resign in May 2004. However, unresolved territorial integrity issues have again risen to the forefront inSouth Ossetia andAbkhazia as a result of the2008 South Ossetia War. On 11 November 2010, Georgian Deputy Prime MinisterGiorgi Baramidze announced that Georgia wants to cooperate with Ukraine in their attempt to join the European Union.[101]

The European Parliament notes that in accordance with Article 49 of the Treaty with the EU, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine, like any other European country, have a European perspective and can apply for EU membership in accordance with the principles of democracy - it said in a resolution of the European Parliament in Brussels, adopted at the last session before the elections to the European Parliament, which took place on 23–25 May 2014.[102]

Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Garibashvili said at a press conference in Brussels on 27 June 2014 that Georgia could be a full EU member within 5–10 years. However, he stressed that Georgia had not fixed a date for bidding for EU membership.[103]

Georgia officially applies for EU membership

[edit]

On 17 January 2021,Irakli Kobakhidze was elected the chairman of the rulingGeorgian Dream party. He announced plans for Georgia to officially apply for EU membership in 2024. Amid the 2022Russo-Ukrainian War, this was expedited to 3 March 2022.[104] On 7 March, the EU said it will formally assess Georgia's application.[105] On 11 April, Georgia has received EU Membership Questionnaire to fill out and send it back for the review in May.[106] According to Garibashvili, the response to the first part was submitted by May 2, remarking on his Twitter account, "I am sure of Georgia's success on in pursuit of the ultimate goal of the Georgian people",[107][108] while the second and final part was submitted on 10 May 2022.[109]

On 17 June 2022, the European Commission recommended that Georgia be given the perspective to become a member of the European Union, but deferred recommending it be given candidate status until after certain conditions were met.[110] On 23 June 2022, theEuropean Parliament adopted a resolution calling for the immediate granting of candidate status for membership of the European Union to Ukraine andMoldova, as well as to support the European perspective forGeorgia.[111][112] On 23 June 2022, theEuropean Council expressed readiness to grant Georgia the status of a candidate for accession to the European Union after a set of recommended reforms.[113]

The EU asked Georgia to complete economic reforms including more investment in education, renewable energy generation, and transportation. Requested political reforms included reduced political polarization, election reforms, judicial reform, stronger anti-corruption institutions, implementing "de-oligarchisation", reducing organized crime, protect journalists from government interference and criminal threats, protect vulnerable groups against criminal human rights violations, improve gender equality, reduce violence against women, increase decision-making influence of civil society, and make thePublic Defender more independent.[114]

In March 2023, the Georgian government withdrew draft legislation putting controls on "foreign agents", after condemnation from EU officials.[115]

In SeptemberEU foreign affairs chief,Josep Borrell, advised that Georgia needed to do more to advance in its accession aims.[116] In this/Borrell's 8 September 2023 visit to Georgia Borrell stated that nine of the 12 conditions, as stipulated by the EU in 2022, for granting Georgia its membership candidate status remained unfulfilled.[117] Borrell also condemnedGeorgia's May 2023 consent to resume direct flights between Georgia and Russia, and he claimed that EU applicant countries should act in accordance with the EU policies of "isolating Russia for invading Ukraine last year".[117] He also stated that the Georgian authorities “must ensure” a “proper environment” to depolarise the existing “tense political scene” and highlighted that the ruling party Georgian Dream announcement made early September 2023 to start an impeachment process againstPresident of GeorgiaSalome Zourabichvili for an alleged unauthorized EU trip could further strengthen political polarization.[117] Borrell also noted that it seemed that Georgia's compatibility with the EU's efforts to have a joint approach on priority issues “was not very high”, and the direction required to be improved.[117]

On 15 September 2023Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Garibashvili alleged that the EU would have “no reasons” to reject Georgia's candidacy in December 2023, Garibashvili claimed that “all remaining issues” related to the reform agenda outlined by the EU in 2022 for granting the status would be resolved by the end of that month (September 2023).[118]

On 6 October 2023, Croatian Prime MinisterAndrej Plenković highlighted his support for granting Georgia EU candidate status during the European Political Community Summit in Granada, Spain.[119]

On 12 October 2023, Hungarian Prime MinisterViktor Orbán has called EU's 2022 rejection of membership candidate status for Georgia "very disappointing" and "unfair decision" in light of granting the candidacy to Moldova and Ukraine. Orban has also said that the decision contradicts the "European interests".[120]

On 13 October 2023, theNational Assembly of Bulgaria passed a resolution in favor of granting Georgia EU candidate status.[121]

Romanian ambassador to Georgia reaffirmed Romania's support for granting Georgia the candidate status in December 2023.[122]

On 8 November 2023, theEuropean Commission recommended giving candidate status to Georgia.[123] On 15 December 2023, theEuropean Council agreed to giving candidate status to Georgia.[124]

However, following the Georgian government's approval of legislation which would requirenon-governmental organizations to register asforeign agents or "organizations carrying the interests of a foreign power" and disclose the sources of their income if the funds they receive from abroad amount to more than 20% of their total revenue, which led towidespread protests in the country, theEuropean Council stated in June 2024 that this represented "backsliding on the steps set out in the Commission’s recommendation for candidate status" and that the accession process would be de facto on hold until the government changes course.[125]On 9 July 2024, the EU ambassador in Georgia announced that the European Union had suspended the country's accession process.[126][127]

The2024 Georgian parliamentary elections resulted in Georgian Dream retaining power, but were disputed by opposition parties which claimed that the vote was not free and fair and was subject to widespread voter fraud. TheEuropean Parliament adopted a non-binding resolution which rejected the validity of the results, and called for the vote to be repeated within a year.[128] On 28 November 2024, Georgian Prime MinisterIrakli Kobakhidze announced that Georgia's EU accession negotiations had been suspended until the end of 2028,[129] though he insisted thathis government would continue to implement the reforms required for accession and that it still planned for Georgia to join the EU by 2030.[130]

Visa liberalization dialogue

[edit]

In June 2012, the EU and Georgia began a visa liberalisation dialogue to allow for visa-free travel of Georgian citizens to the European Union. The talks aimed to have a Visa Liberalisation Action Plan in place by the end of the year.[16]The action plan was delivered to Georgia on 25 February 2013.[131]The new project on 'Strengthening the capacity of the Georgian Government in border management and migration regulation' which was launched in Tbilisi by the EU Delegation to Georgia, will be implemented by the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) and International Centre for Migration Policy Development (ICMPD), the EU Delegation to Georgia said in its statement on 24 January 2014. Thus, Georgia will take another step towards visa-free travel to the Schengen area through an EU-funded project which will help to increase the capacity of the Georgian authorities in the field of integrated border management and migration.[132] In December 2015, the Commission issued a progress report that found that Georgia met all the conditions for its citizens be granted visa-free travel to the Schengen area.[133] The European Commission formally proposed Georgia be granted visa free travel in March 2016.[134] TheCommittee of Permanent Representatives gave its approval in October 2016, and it was approved by theEuropean Parliament in February 2017.[135][136] On 8 March 2017 the Official EU Journal published a legislation allowing Georgians owning biometric passports to travel to the Schengen Area visa-free.[137] The legislation came into full effect on 28 March 2017, allowing Georgian citizens to travel for short periods to most EU member countries without a visa.[138]

Georgia's foreign relations with EU member states

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
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