Marko Mihkelson: Representatives of Georgia’s illegitimate authorities consider their own people to be terrorists

Representatives of Georgia’s illegitimate authorities consider their own people to be terrorists, Estonian MP and Chair of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the Estonian Parliament, Marko Mihkelson, wrote on social media, sharing a post by Georgian Parliament Speaker Shalva Papuashvili claiming that “Brussels will neither condemn nor distance itself from the attack on the Presidential Palace.”

“The representatives of Georgia’s illegitimate authorities consider their own people to be terrorists. I am honored to stand among those good Europeans who have not forgotten the Georgian people’s desire for freedom and who oppose Russia’s attempt to expand its empire at Georgia’s expense,” Mihkelson wrote.

For reference, earlier today Shalva Papuashvili wrote on social media:

“Today is February 4, and it has been four months since Brussels refused to condemn the mob assault on Georgia’s Presidential Palace, which left over 20 policemen hospitalized. Four months is more than enough time to become sure that Brussels is not going to either condemn or distance from the coup attempt. This astonishing fact is logical, though: Why would Brussels distance itself from the announced coup, which had been de-facto supported by EU’s official spokesperson Anitta Hipper just days before the coup attempt?"

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