MOSCOW (Reuters) – Georgia’s ruling party, Georgian Dream, won 19 of 20 mayoral elections including in the capital Tbilisi, electoral authorities said on Sunday, as the opposition alleged that ballots had been rigged.
Central Election Commission chief Georgi Kalandarishvili said Saturday’s voting had been competitive, free and transparent, while independent election monitor Transparency International said it had identified up to 150 violations, ranging from minor to relatively serious.
Denouncing the vote, the head of the United National Movement (UNM) opposition party, Nika Melia, called on supporters to gather in Tbilisi on Sunday to agree a response.
“No one should have the illusion that they can get away with rigged, violent and insulting elections,” Melia, who ran for office in the capital, was quoted as saying by the RIA news agency.
There was no immediate response to Melia’s allegations from Georgian Dream, but the ruling party rejected claims of foul play at the previous local election held on Oct. 2.
Election Commission chief Kalandarishvili said several incidents at polling stations, the nature of which he did not specify, had not had an impact on the results, Interfax said.
His commission would review complaints over the voting process in coming days, he added.
Saturday’s elections included second round run-offs to elect mayors in 20 municipalities including four major cities – Batumi, Kutaisi, Poti and Rustavi.
The only race won by UNM was in Tsalenjikha, a small town in western Georgia, Russian new agencies cited the Election Commission as saying.
The first round of mayoral elections was held on Oct. 2 during a set of nationwide local elections that Georgian Dream also won.
Georgia, a country of around 3.9 million, has faced a political standoff since a disputed election last year, which prompted the UNM to boycott the parliament for months.
The party was founded by former president Mikheil Saakashvili, who was arrested in October after he flew in from exile. He declared a hunger strike on Oct. 1 that his allies have urged him to call off, fearing for his health.
(Writing by Maxim Rodionov; Editing by Tom Balmforth and John Stonestreet)