Two weeks before the election, hateful banners reappeared in Georgia.
This time, in addition to the third president of Georgia, leaders of opposition parties and managers of media critical of the government, ex-PM Giorgi Gakharia is also depicted on the billboards.
Several NGOs and political movements have protested the hateful banners, but the Georgian Dream denies any connections to them, while also not hiding their support for these banners.
Further outrage was caused by the fact that pro-vaccination banners have been covered by the hateful ones, which speaks clearly about the ruling teams and the hateful group's political priorities and their mission.
It has also been uncovered that in 2018, anti-occupation banners were declined to be erected on "ALMA's" billboards, do to its contents being "unnacaptable" to them.
This is a fact when in 2018 the company Alma refused to place an anti-occupation banner for me and my friends because according to their explanation the content turned out to be unacceptable.
It turns out that the language of hatred and disgust is more acceptable than the protection of state interests.
Based on this fact, it is clear that the company, which has been in turmoil since 2012, serves only private party interests," Charkhalashvili wrote.