The Head of the Anti-Corruption Bureau, Razhden Kuprashvili, and the First Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs, Giorgi Zurabashvili, convened with representatives of the diplomatic corps and international organizations  accredited in Georgia. The principal agenda item of the meeting was the amendments to Georgia's Law on Grants

The Head of the Anti-Corruption Bureau, Razhden Kuprashvili, and the First Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs, Giorgi Zurabashvili, convened with representatives of the diplomatic corps and international organizations accredited in Georgia. The principal agenda item of the meeting was the amendments to Georgia's Law on Grants.

The Head of the Bureau elucidated the objectives and significance of the previously mentioned legislation to the assembled attendees. He underscored that the law is designed to ensure the transparency of activities conducted by organizations receiving foreign funding, rather than to impose control or restrict their operations in any manner.

Furthermore, the discussion encompassed issues and challenges pertaining to the enforcement of the law. Razhden Kuprashvili affirmed that the Anti-Corruption Bureau's objective is to foster open discourse regarding the legislation and to facilitate the dissemination of accurate information, both domestically and internationally.

Notably, prior to this engagement with ambassadors, the Anti-Corruption Bureau had conducted separate meetings with representatives from non-governmental organizations, legal practitioners, and academic institutions, where the Law on Grants and its implementation mechanisms were similarly deliberated.

Ambassador of Korea Hyon Du KIM - Korea’s strength lies in high-tech manufacturing while Georgia’s strength is in logistics and service areas - Georgia should not be just considered as a single market but as a market that can encompass the region and beyond
Oleksii Reznikov - Russia, in reality, is a paper tiger