RE: CGEO on sanctions list?18 Feb 2025 09:53
Here's the Telegraph article on CGEO's CEO Irakli Gilauri FYI - can see a response from the Board on their site but nothing further from US State Dept re: sanctions. Anyone seen different?
Irakli Machaidze, The Telegraph:
Georgia’s drifts towards authoritarianism has repercussions for the London Stock Exchange
What happens in the Caucasus is no longer confined to a distant and too often overlooked region of Europe
Georgia, until recently a source of economic optimism on the troubled fringes of Europe, has elected to follow an anti-democratic path towards Moscow. The ruling Georgian Dream party has effectively halted the country’s EU accession talks, triggering political unrest, Western sanctions and mounting investor anxiety.
The TV images of protesters being beaten are heartbreaking. But while international media has focussed on democratic backsliding, a parallel threat is arising for foreign businesses and investors, particularly those invested in nominally “safer” stocks on indices like the London Stock Exchange.
New names are being added to international sanctions lists all the time. Alongside already sanctioned government ministers, there now appear names of leaders of large U.K. based companies, including firms listed on the LSE. These individuals are being outed as “enablers"; and beneficiaries of authoritarian practices, and they are facing potential sanctions in the US and elsewhere.
Three London-listed Georgian firms, Bank of Georgia Group PLC, TBC Bank Group PLC, and Georgia Capital PLC, serve as barometers of the country’s volatility. Since April 2024, when the Georgian government revived it push for a Russian-style foreign agents law, these companies’ share prices have plummeted by an average of 10 to 15 per cent. Georgia’s parliamentary elections in October, widely condemned as fraudulent, triggered a further 10 per cent fall. Political turmoil is manifesting in financial instability, prompting Fitch Ratings to downgrade Georgia’s outlook from “stable” to “negative'.
Sanctions on political elites undermine investor confidence, especially in nations dependent on foreign investment. While U.S. sanctions against Georgian Dream founder Bidzina Ivanishvili aim to limit his influence, they have a broader effect. As Georgia becomes geopolitically isolated, its economic reliance on Russia and non-Western actors will only increase.
Compounding these risks, Georgia has refused to join Western sanctions against Russia, fuelling suspicions it is facilitating sanctions evasion. Former US sanctions coordinator James O’Brien has raised concerns that Georgia is bolstering Russia’s military supply chain, claims substantiated by investigative journalists working in Georgia.
Meanwhile, the National Bank of Georgia has implemented a rule that shields sanctioned individuals from international restrictions: the Bank will only enforce sanctions if a local court has found an individual guilty, an