TBILISI, Georgia — Tens of thousands of Georgians massed outside parliament Monday night, demanding the annulment of the weekend parliamentary election that the president has alleged was rigged with the help of Russia.
The rally underlined tensions in the country which lies between Russia and Turkey and where the governing Georgian Dream party has become increasingly authoritarian and tilted toward Moscow. However, it ended peacefully after several hours and there were no clear plans for further actions.
''You did not lose the election,'' President Salome Zourabichvili told the demonstrators who waved Georgian and European Union flags. ''They stole your vote and tried to steal your future, but no one has the right to do that and you will not let anyone do that!''
Zourabichvili, a mostly ceremonial president, told the crowd that she would defend the country's path toward Europe against actions by Georgian Dream.
''We have no alternative and nothing else we want to leave this country for the next generations,'' she said.
Giorgi Vashadze, leader of Unity National Movement coalition, said the opposition won't take part in any talks with the government and will push for a new vote under international supervision.
''We are not going to enter this parliament. We refuse all mandates,'' he said. ''We are not going to enter into any negotiations. We are going to fight until victory and we promise you, we will definitely win together.''
Zourabichvili told the crowd ''a complete picture must be drawn of how this massive, systematic theft of votes took place,'' adding it was an ''unprecedented, pre-planned operation that robbed us of our votes, our parliament, and our constitution.'' She did not provide specific details or present evidence of Russia's involvement in vote theft.