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Ukraine blasts ex-Soviet state over war damage images

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Georgia’s ruling party has used pictures of bombed-out Ukrainian cities in its election ads

Kiev has lashed out at Georgia’s ruling party, Georgian Dream, over its use of campaign videos and images depicting damage sustained by Ukraine in the conflict with Russia. According to a statement issued by the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry earlier this week, it is “inadmissible” to use the footage of “suffering and blood of thousands of innocent people” in political advertising.

The controversial banners started appearing on the streets of Tbilisi earlier this week, along with video versions that were posted on Georgian Dream’s official social media accounts. Both the banners and video ads are divided down the middle, with the left side showing Ukrainian buildings and streets damaged in Russian airstrikes and the caption “No war!” It also shows the ballot numbers of the country’s four major opposition parties, crossed-out.

Meanwhile, the right side displays peaceful views of the city of Batumi, along with structures built or restored by the founder of Georgian Dream, Bidzina Ivanishvili. The caption on the right-hand side urges people to “choose peace.”

Georgian Dream confirmed that the banners are part of their election campaign in a statement to local media. The party said the ads aim to remind Georgians “where the opposition is leading the country.”

In its statement, the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry urged the Georgian government, Georgian Dream, and “all interested parties” to “refrain from using” the Ukraine conflict “in the internal political struggle in Georgia.” It also raised the threat allegedly posed by Russia, stating that the Georgian people have no reason to fear a war “as long as Ukraine resists.” The ministry then expressed hope that Georgia will continue “the strategic course of joining the EU and NATO.”

Georgia’s pro-Western president, Salome Zourabichvili, has criticized the ad campaign, calling it “disgraceful” and “insulting.” Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze, however, defended his party’s choice of images, saying that voters needed to “fully understand what the price of war is” and “make the right choice” in the upcoming election. He previously warned that the opposition would inevitably drag the country into a war. Kobakhidze also noted that Kiev had previously used footage of the war in Georgia’s breakaway region, Abkhazia, “for various purposes, including humor.”

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