For Georgia’s Parulava: UNM and parties behind provocative scenarios of October 4 are red line for Gakharia’s party
“The United National Movement and the parties involved in orchestrating the provocative revolutionary scenarios of October 4 are a red line for us,” declared Giga Parulava, a member of the Gakharia for Georgia party.
According to Parulava, Gakharia for Georgia remains indifferent as to whether these parties will unite, disband, or pursue other political avenues.
“These parties have previously united and subsequently disbanded. Now they are uniting once more and talking about unity again, which is somewhat amusing. We reiterate that the United National Movement constitutes a red line for us. Their divisions, whether they call themselves UNM now or did so in the past, these individuals must first clarify to the public where they obtained tens of millions of GEL during the 2024 parliamentary elections amid the de facto dictatorship, funds which they used to run their election campaign. They need to account for their role in planning and executing the provocative scenario of October 4, which led our citizens into a significant deception and effectively facilitated a coup d’état.
They must also clarify why they boycotted the self-governance elections as mandated by the Constitution. This entire harmful scenario served as propaganda for the Georgian Dream. Time and again, as they have done previously, they unwittingly provide a vital lifeline to the Georgian Dream, inadvertently strengthening the ruling party through their political actions. They owe the public explanations about what they served in the past and the motives behind their actions.
Whether they unite or divide, the red line remains the same: the United National Movement and parties involved in the preparation of the provocative scenarios of October 4. Naturally, we have nothing in common with them. We genuinely don’t care if these parties unite, disband, or pursue other political pursuits. We will have no connection, alliance, or relationship with the United National Movement, the former UNM, the new UNM, or the current UNM,” concluded Giga Parulava.