TBILISI, Georgia — Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán will visit Georgia on Monday and meet with the country’s prime minister, lending legitimacy to a government that faces allegations of vote-rigging following an election on Saturday.
Brussels on Sunday warned of serious irregularities in the nationwide vote, which saw the governing Georgian Dream party attack Western influence and threaten to ban rival parties. Hours earlier, Tbilisi had announced the Hungarian prime minister would be kicking off a two-day visit to Georgia on Monday.
In a statement issued Sunday evening, the bloc’s top diplomat, Josep Borrell, said the weekend’s Georgian election was defined by “an uneven level playing field, a divisive campaign in polarised atmosphere and significant concerns over the impact of recent legislative amendments on this election process,” in addition to claims of intimidation and procedural irregularities.