TBILISI (Reuters) -Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze said on Sunday that protesters who sought to force entry to the presidential palace the previous evening had been trying to topple the government and accused the European Union of meddling in Georgia’s affairs.

Georgian riot police used pepper spray and water cannons to drive demonstrators away from the presidential palace in the capital Tbilisi on Saturday, and detained five activists, as the opposition staged a large demonstration on a day of local elections.

On Sunday, the State Security Service said it had discovered a large cache of weapons, ammunition, explosives and a detonator in a forest outside Tbilisi it said were intended for “subversive acts” at Saturday’s protest.

It said a Georgian citizen, whom it identified only by the individual’s initials, had purchased the arms at the behest of another Georgian fighting in Ukraine, according to the statement cited by the Interpress news agency.

ACCUSATIONS OF EU MEDDLING

Kobakhidze said that up to 7,000 people attended Saturday’s rally but their “attempt to overthrow the constitutional order” had failed despite what he said was support from Brussels.

He accused EU Ambassador Paweł Herczynski of meddling in Georgian politics and urged him to condemn the protests.

“You know that specific people from abroad have even expressed direct support for all this, for the announced attempt to overthrow the constitutional order,” Interpress cited Kobakhidze as saying.

“In this context, the European Union ambassador to Georgia bears special responsibility. He should come out, distance himself and strictly condemn everything that is happening on the streets of Tbilisi.”

In a statement on Sunday, the EU’s top diplomat Kaja Kallas and European Commissioner for Enlargement Marta Kops said the bloc “firmly rejects and condemns the disinformation regarding the EU’s role in Georgia and denounces the personal attacks against the Ambassador of the European Union to Georgia.”

The statement said the election had taken place “amid a period of extensive crackdown on dissent” and urged authorities and civil society against engaging in violence.

The governing Georgian Dream party claimed victory in every municipality across the South Caucasus country of 3.7 million people in Saturday’s municipal election, which was boycotted by the two largest opposition blocs.

Georgia’s pro-Western opposition has been staging protests since October last year, when Georgian Dream won a parliamentary election that its critics say was fraudulent. The party has rejected accusations of vote-rigging.

Once one of the most pro-Western nations to emerge from the ashes of the Soviet Union, Georgia has had frayed relations with the West since Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022.

(Reporting by Reuters in Moscow and Tbilisi; editing by Guy Faulconbridge and Ros Russell)


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