Day: April 9, 2024
On April 5, Armenian civil society organizations (CSOs) and individuals issued a statement expressing their solidarity with Georgian civil society and their commitment to assist in any way deemed helpful following the ruling party’s decision to reintroduce the Russian-style Foreign Agents Bill.
“We support you in your courage to stand against consistent and constant efforts by Georgia’s government to limit civic freedoms and fundamental human rights, including in the form of limiting the political participation of women, also by re-introducing the draft law on Transparency of Foreign Influence,” – reads the CSOs statement.
The Armenian civic activists emphasize that the concept of foreign influence is historically linked to “advancing conspiracy theories used for violations of human rights and prosecution of the innocent, from which both our nations suffered significantly.” They emphasize that when democracy is under attack, it is important to unite pro-democracy forces and “build firewalls against attempts of weakening it in our region and beyond.”
The civil society organizations note that they are following developments in Georgia “with sadness, but also with admiration” for the resilience demonstrated by Georgian civil society and emphasize that “freedom is deeply and inherently rooted in our societies, and even in the darkest hours of history the fight for it was never compromised.”
Also Read:
- 06/04/2024 – US Helsinki Commission: “Foreign Agent” Legislation – Self-Sabotage of Georgia’s EU Candidacy
- 05/04/2024 – Twelve European Foreign Affairs Committee Chairs: Foreign Agents Bill a “Hostile Step”
- 05/04/2024 – Germany Warns “Foreign Influence” Draft Puts EU Membership at Risk
- 05/04/2024 – MEPs Call on European Commission to Monitor GD Decisions’ Compatibility with EU Candidate Status
- 05/04/2024 – US State Department Spokesperson: Deeply Concerned that Bill will Derail Georgia from European Path
- 05/04/2024 – PACE Co-rapporteurs Express “Deep Concern” Over Re-tabled Foreign Agents Law
- 04/04/2024 – EU: “Seriously Concerned” over Reintroduction of Foreign Agents Law
- 04/04/2024 – Risch, Shaheen Statement on Reintroduction of Foreign Agents’ Law
The Republican presidential candidate’s lawyers said in a hearing at a mid-level appeals court known as the Appellate Division that Justice Juan Merchan’s order restricting his public comments should be modified to let him respond to public criticism leveled by potential witnesses in the case.
“The First Amendment harms arising from this gag order right now are irreparable,” Trump’s attorney Emil Bove said during the hearing.
Merchan imposed the order last month barring him from verbal attacks on potential witnesses, court staff and individual prosecutors after finding Trump made statements in various legal cases that the judge called “threatening, inflammatory” and “denigrating.”
The judge expanded the order to cover his relatives and those of Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg after Trump disparaged Merchan’s daughter online.
The order does not restrict Trump’s speech about Merchan or Bragg.
Steven Wu, a lawyer with Bragg’s office, said at the Appellate Division hearing that the trial should not be delayed since Trump’s lawyers could have made the appeal earlier.
He also said his office had to increase security due to Trump’s statements, and that potential witnesses were reluctant to testify because of Trump’s comments.
“They know what their names in the press may lead to,” Wu said. “This is a pattern of misconduct that causes predictable, terrifying consequences.”
Associate Justice Cynthia Kern, who heard the arguments, said she would rule on Trump’s request to pause proceedings in the case later on Tuesday. A full panel of appellate judges would then hear his lawyers’ underlying challenge to the gag order.
Trump is accused of covering up his former lawyer Michael Cohen’s $130,000 payment to porn star Stormy Daniels in exchange for her silence before the 2016 presidential election about a sexual encounter she said she had with Trump a decade earlier.
Trump has pleaded not guilty to 34 counts of falsifying business records and denied any such encounter with Daniels, whose real name is Stephanie Clifford.
Trump lost on Monday a last-ditch bid to delay the trial while he tries to move the case out of heavily Democratic Manhattan. His lawyers said a survey of Manhattan residents they conducted showed that 61% of respondents thought Trump was guilty and 70% had a negative opinion of him.
The hush money case is one of four criminal indictments Trump faces as he prepares to challenge Democratic President Joe Biden in their November 5 U.S. election rematch.
The others stem from his efforts to overturn his 2020 election loss to Biden and his handling of sensitive government documents after leaving the presidency in 2021. Trump has pleaded not guilty to all charges.
NPR News: 04-09-2024 12PM EDT
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