TBILISI, Georgia — The head of Georgia's Central Electoral Commission was doused with black paint Saturday at a meeting to confirm the results of the country's divisive Oct. 26 parliamentary elections.
Protesters gathered outside the commission's building in Tbilisi, where officials announced that the ruling Georgian Dream party had won 53.93% of the vote.
Opposition supporters have rejected the results amid allegations that the vote was rigged, an accusation that Georgian Dream denies.
The Saturday session was interrupted when David Kirtadze, a commission member from the opposition United National Movement party, threw black paint at commission chairman Giorgi Kalandarishvili.
Before the incident, Kirtadze told Kalandarishvili that the official results of the vote did not reflect voters' ''true choice.''
Kalandarishvili responded by saying that the use of ''pressure, bullying and personal insults'' proved that there was no evidence of vote rigging.
When the meeting resumed, Kalandarishvili was seen with a bandaged eye.
''It once again becomes evident that there is no tangible proof indicating that the elections were manipulated,'' he told the audience.