GD's Gorduladze says new law not to extend to money transferred by migrants to their families
GD's Gorduladze says new law not to extend to money transferred by migrants to their families

“Eka Gigauri (Executive Director of Transparency International Georgia) knows that when a new law is enacted, she will have to be fully transparent, and she attempts to deceive people by saying that immigrants will no longer be able to transfer money to their families for household needs. This is a lie,” wrote Archil Gorduladze, a member of the Georgian Dream party, in his social network post.

According to Gorduladze, Eka Gigauri serves as a classic example of why the legislation requires improvement to reduce the import of black money into the country.

“Captain Gigauri, the unchanging, sole ruler and ‘tyrant’ (according to her own employees), director of ‘international Non-Transparency’ is spreading another lie. How can she be trusted when the organization title is transparency but represents the most non-transparent organization and rejects to make transparent even one tetri received from abroad.

Putting aside other evils, in order to hide the funds received and spent, she has been involved in the scam of the century since 2023, at the behest of her boss, and even re-registered in Estonia to conceal the money transferred from her boss.

After the new legislative change comes into effect, she knows that neither she nor the collective Marta Kos will be able to circumvent the law and finance it without the consent of the Georgian government. She acknowledges that she will have to be truly transparent and attempts to deceive people by saying that immigrants will no longer be able to transfer money to their families for household needs. This is a lie.

Despite causing impediments from ‘International Non-transparency funded from abroad, we will ensure peace in our country, implement reforms, contribute to economic growth, solve social issues and care about Georgia, which is a motherland for us, while for such people it remains only an inscription on a passport in their pockets,” Gorduladze said.